Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal ComputerChronicles History of Computer Pioneers & the Industry They Founded |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 36
Page 158
... magazines , but the success grew out of conflict and , perhaps , betrayal . Byte magazine began in mid - 1975 , the brainchild of Wayne Green , who had published the ham radio magazine 73 for 15 years . Part evangelist and part huckster ...
... magazines , but the success grew out of conflict and , perhaps , betrayal . Byte magazine began in mid - 1975 , the brainchild of Wayne Green , who had published the ham radio magazine 73 for 15 years . Part evangelist and part huckster ...
Page 177
... magazine did an article on these affairs , and the publicity forced the officials of the College of Notre Dame into ... magazine , and hobbyists turned to PCC to provide one . Dick Whipple and John Arnold of Tyler , Texas , sent in a ...
... magazine did an article on these affairs , and the publicity forced the officials of the College of Notre Dame into ... magazine , and hobbyists turned to PCC to provide one . Dick Whipple and John Arnold of Tyler , Texas , sent in a ...
Page 281
... magazine , responded to IBM's arrival by coming out with a thick magazine directed at users of the IBM machine . Soon major publishers were fighting over Bunnell's magazine . Wayne Green , having built Kilobaud into an empire of ...
... magazine , responded to IBM's arrival by coming out with a thick magazine directed at users of the IBM machine . Soon major publishers were fighting over Bunnell's magazine . Wayne Green , having built Kilobaud into an empire of ...
Contents
The Voyage to Altair | 25 |
The Miracle Makers | 55 |
Homebrew | 97 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer Paul Freiberger,Michael Swaine No preview available - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
Altair Apple Computer Apple II Apple's BASIC began Bill Gates Bill Millard Bob Marsh building Byte calculator California called chip circuit board Computer Club computer companies ComputerLand Corporation CP/M Cromemco customers David Ahl dealers device Digital Research disk drive Dompier early Ed Roberts employees engineers Espinosa Eubanks Faber Fylstra garage Gary Kildall Gates and Allen Godbout hardware Heiser hobbyists Hoff Homebrew IMSAI industry Intel knew language later Lee Felsenstein Lohse machine magazine mainframe Markkula memory boards Micro microcomputer microprocessor Microsoft Mike Markkula minicomputer MITS MITS's operating system Osborne Paul Allen personal computer Pertec Photo courtesy Popular Electronics problem Proc Tech Processor Technology puter Radio Shack retail Roberts Rubinstein sell semiconductor Shrayer Silicon Valley sold Solomon soon Steve Jobs Steve Wozniak Tandy Terrell things thought told took users VisiCalc wanted Wigginton Woz's Xerox
References to this book
Western Sunrise: The Genesis and Growth of Britain's Major High Tech Corridor No preview available - 1987 |