Computer Folklore, Circa 1984
savetz writes "The full text of the classic 1984 computer book Digital Deli, The Comprehensive, User-Lovable Menu of Computer Lore, Culture, Lifestyles and Fancy, is now on the Web. (Autstralian mirror) A wonderful look at technology culture in the golden age of the microcomputer. 20 other old computer books are at the site, too."
one mystery cleared up: I had always wondered how Byte Magazine, started by Wayne Green, ended up as his (ex) wife's property:
Because he was in the middle of an IRS audit and did not wish to have his new venture involved, Wayne registered the magazine in his wife's name. As it turned out, this was a serious error. No one except those involved will ever know just what happened, but when the smoke cleared Wayne still had 73 magazine and his ex-wife, now married to a German gentleman, had Byte, with Carl Helmers as the editor.
doh!
try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
Jesus, I stated on a ZX-81 and went to work in '85.
I still have the first computer book I ever bought. Electronic Data Processing by Glyn Emery Pitman. Published in 1968.
Anybody who thinks computers are cool technology should dig up this book or one like it. They had everything back then, we've been treading water for 30+ years.
This image alone is worth the visit to the site. Interesting background too:
It's been a long time since computer books were so underground that they could publish with copyrighted images on the front covers. Actually, it's been a long time since underground publications period could get away with this.
Metamuscle.com - News in the Iro
Damnit, for the last time, theft and copyright infringement are COMPLETELY different things!
A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
Sinclair Research first created the ZX80, then the ZX81 and then the ZX Spectrum. I believe they were all created around the Zilog Z80 processor (as were other home computers such as the Jupiter Ace which used Forth instead of BASIC !).
/ Sinclair
The ZX80 used a Z80 CPU clone running at 3.5 MHz and was delivered with 1KB or RAM, expandable up to 16KB.
ZX Spectrum featured 16KB of RAM (upgradable to 48K) and color display.
See http://directory.google.com/Top/Computers/Systems
What is the sound of one hand clapping?
cat