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Portable Pioneer Adam Osborne dead at 64

douglips writes "Yahoo News has the story. He's best remembered for the blunder of announcing that his next version of the Osborne portable computer was so much better, that nobody bought the current version and the company died quickly. I'm sure everyone in the Slashdot community will miss him - even if you didn't enjoy his work, there's no denying his contributions to popular culture. Truly an American icon."

20 of 322 comments (clear)

  1. So sad... by SpanishInquisition · · Score: 5, Funny

    I hope Sharon,Kelly,Jack and of course Ozzy will be able to go trough this with force and pride.

    --
    Je t'aime Stéphanie
    1. Re:So sad... by devnull17 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I hope Sharon, Kelly, Jack and Ozzy follow soon.

  2. Never heard of him... by }InFuZeD{ · · Score: 5, Funny

    But I really hope when I die I'm not best known for what I did wrong =/

    1. Re:Never heard of him... by IdleTime · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I actullay met the guy several times during the early 80's. I was working for a distributor of Osborne computers in a rather obscure country :)

      I really liked the guy, he had a lot of good ideas in the pioneer days of PC computing and he made the first portable computer that was actually usable.

      Adam, you will be missed by many who knew you and admired the work you did.

      Rest in peace!

      --
      If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
  3. A fitting number. by RatBastard · · Score: 5, Funny

    It seems fitting, in a nerdish way, that he should die at 64. There is a certain symmetry somehow.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    1. Re:A fitting number. by FrostedWheat · · Score: 5, Funny

      It seems fitting, in a nerdish way, that he should die at 64. There is a certain symmetry somehow.

      Real programmers never die, they are simply cast into (void*)

    2. Re:A fitting number. by Sloppy · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, he could have lived to age 128, but that would have required bank switching.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    3. Re:A fitting number. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Sorry..I program in Java, and I'm unsettled by the fact that I will be collected as garbage in the afterlife.

  4. He also should be remembered for. . . by Fritz+Benwalla · · Score: 4, Informative

    Writing the manuals for the Intel 4004, the very first single chip CPU.

    Rest in peace.

    -----

    --

    Believe me, I'm as surprised by my comment as you are.
  5. Last Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "My reincarnated self is going to be waaaaaay better than this.

  6. Farewell, Uncle A-O by Mr.+Spleen · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have family photos with him back from the early 80s. I was just a tot when he and aunt Barb divorced, so I don't remember him. My mom has told me that I called him Uncle A-O (since my name is also Adam).

    But a few of my extended family members still have Osborne 1s in their basements/attics/garages. I played with one last year at a family reunion. The article is correct, it's almost exactly like a portable sewing machine.

    So long, Uncle A-O!

  7. OH my gosh... by snatchitup · · Score: 5, Interesting

    He came to my school while I was in the MBA program. He gave us a little speach on what it meant to be an entrepreneur.

    He said, "An entrepreneur is the kind of guy that walks into a bar with friends, and notices the one woman that is too hot for anyone to consider making an approach. The entrepreneur is able to walk up to that woman, begin a conversation, and have her under his thumb before the evening's end."

    He then went to speak of a lawsuit against is VP line of software. He had a spreadsheet and was in a lawsuit against Lotus.
    He said something like, "Who care if I lose. Any publicity is good publicity. When I'm at the press conference after verdict, I'll announce my new line of Artificial Intelligence software."

    Just thought I'd share with you.

    RIP Adam.

  8. MAn i thought my Kaypro was old by eadint · · Score: 4, Informative

    If your woundering heres a Picture of it. man i thought my kaypro was ugly and old.

  9. Back in the day... by john82 · · Score: 5, Informative
    The Osborne1 was the hot piece of technology. And to give you an idea how desperate the situation was, consider this.
    • It had a 5 inch screen that was monochrome (amber I seem to recall).
    • It weighed a freakin' ton. Okay maybe 30lbs. But the brochures highlighted that like it was impressive (Only 30 lbs!).
    • There were two 5.25" floppies (360k?)
    • 64 kB of RAM!
    • And last, but not least, a 4MHz Z80 CPU!

    Gadzooks how could one resist? But for a lot of folks who needed a computer not bolted to the floor (like reporters), the Osborne1 fit the bill.
  10. 64 years of life... by gonzo_bozo · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Nobody will ever need more than 64 years of life..." Yet another shortsighted designer :(

  11. stuff I remember about Osborne by chitselb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm 40. Back in the day, I worked at the Tyson's Corner ComputerLand store, where they sold the Osborne I. It had a Z-80, it ran CP/M -- the precursor to what could have been DOS if only Kildall hadn't been out flying his airplane the on the day IBM knocked on his door. The bundled software with an Osborne I included PacMan, adapted for the 16x64 text display, and I played that on the floor demo a lot.

    Looking back now, it seems to me that the Osborne books were the logical O'Reilly Associates of that era. I was particularly fond of "Introduction to Microprocessors" and their various assembly language introductions. My copies were majorly dogeared. The only one I hung onto was my 6502 Assembly Language Programming by Lance Leventhal.

    About ten years ago, some friends of mine gave me an Osborne I, which they picked up for $7 at a garage sale in Colorado Springs. I turned it on a few years ago and it still worked... was thinking of Ebaying it but I think I might just hang on to it now. Osborne will be remembered by me mostly for the Osborne I and those great books he published.

    --
    never ask a question you don't want to know the answer to
  12. Remember Adam Osborne by __aaowgu6674 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I worked with Mr. Osborne during the late 1980s at Paperback Software (I was the Tech Support Manager). He was a brilliant, charismatic leader with enough ego for four people. A member of MENSA, he had a beautiful house in the Berkeley Hills (spared from the Oakland Hills fire by feet, IIRC), a lovely wife, and he threw marvelous parties.
    Paperback Software was a great idea - cheap versions of popular software sold with paperback manuals for $99.00 or so (I think VP-Expert sold for more). VP-Planner was the Lotus clone, VP-Info was a dBase clone, VP-Graphics was a standalone graphics program, VP-Expert was an expert systems program, and there were a couple more I don't remember off the top of my head.
    He was a good person to work for and with, and always knew how to make a splash and cause a ruckus. And it was fun to go out for Indian food with him, since he spoke Urdu and Hindi.
    Rest in peace, sir.

  13. Re:never used an osborne by garethw · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Osborne 1 was a such a cool machine.
    http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/os borne/

    It was based on a Zilog Z80A processor (same as that used in the Sinclair ZX Spectrum and the Colecovision console, and similar to that used in the original Gameboy), but curiously, used Motorola peripheral chips.

    It came bundled with a wide selection of software - Supercalc, Wordstar, an operating system called CP/M (the blueprint for DOS), and a BASIC interpreter by a small software company called Microsoft.

    One of the really cool things about the Osborne is that it was sold with a manual about 500 pages thick. There are chapters on each of the software packages, but also a great deal of technical information on the machine itself - memory maps, details on the types of peripherals and that kind of thing.

    It was clearly the product of a man and a company who loved computing, released in a spirit of openness and innocence for a hobbyist culture. Sadly, that culture died soon after, and stayed that way for some time.

    It was the first computer I ever had, which started me off down a road that eventually led to me earn a degree in Computer Engineering. When I first heard about Linux, it was that same hobbyist culture that immediately appealed to me.

    I think I'll boot mine up tonight. Thanks, Adam.

    --
    garethw
  14. The computer that did Osborne in by mpthompson · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those interested, the Vixen is the system that was pre-announced and caused the demise of Osborne Computer due to the ensuing cash flow crunch.

    Having an Osborne 1 at the time and active in FOG I remember lusting over the Vixen. How times have changed...

  15. My first computer was an Osborne I by beej · · Score: 4, Informative
    Rather, my parents' first computer was. I learned to program it as a kid before moving on to the c64.

    POKE 61440, 127

    That'll put a dim rectangle in the upper left corner of the 52x24 screen. Too bad no one ever asks me that in an interview these days...

    As I sit here, I hold in my hand the Osborne I User's Reference Guide. I don't have the computer, but I kept the book for fun. It reads like an old school user's guide, with complete references for BASIC, and a chapter titled "IEEE-488 Implementation". Very useful for users.

    Some specs:

    SCREEN SIZE:

    • 32 lines of 128 characters maintained in RAM
    • 24 lines of 52 characters shown on screen
    • dim, normal, underlined video supported [through bank switching for dim/brite--there was a bank of shadow RAM under video RAM...underline was just bit 7]
    • 32 block graphic characters predefined
    • uppercase/lowercase text display [Whooo!]
    • video emulates TeleVideo terminal
    • external video available via edge connector

    DISK CAPACITY:
    Double-Density:

    • 200K bytes per diskette
    • 185K bytes of data space using CP/M
    • 40 tracks of information
    • 5 physical sectors each track (soft-sectored)
    • 1024 bytes per sector
    • 40 logical sectors to CP/M (128 bytes each)
    • 1K-byte extents maintained by CP/M
    • 3 reserved system tracks
    Single Density:
    • 100K bytes per diskette
    • 92K bytes of data space using CP/M
    • 40 tracks of information
    • 10 physical sectors each track (soft-sectored)
    • 256 bytes per sector
    • 20 logical sectors to CP/M (128 bytes each)
    • 2K-byte extents maintained by CP/M
    • 3 reserved system tracks (See notes, page 760.)

    SERIAL PORT:

    • 1200- or 300-baud, software-selectable
    • 2400- or 600-baud, jumper-selectable
    • uses 6850 chip, all parameters memory-mapped
    • standard female DB-25 connector provided

    IEEE-488 PORT:

    • standard IEEE-488 implementation
    • may be configured as Centronics parallel port
    • 26-pin edge connector provided

    I'll stop typing now before I get to the memory map... :)