Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer"This updated edition features interviews with the major players, new chapters, dozens of new photos, and updates throughout that carry the story forward into the Internet era. The authors convey the exciting development of companies such as Apple, Microsoft, Sun, Netscape, Lotus, and Oracle."--BOOK JACKET. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 88
Page 303
... took place in San Francisco , and it included a presentation by Douglas Engelbart and his colleagues from what was then called the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park , a few miles up the peninsula from Cupertino . Engelbart , an ...
... took place in San Francisco , and it included a presentation by Douglas Engelbart and his colleagues from what was then called the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park , a few miles up the peninsula from Cupertino . Engelbart , an ...
Page 309
... took place right then and there when Steve Jobs decided that Apple would implement these marvels . PARC didn't really give Apple folks the technology so much as the vision . Some time later , Apple took more from PARC when it hired ...
... took place right then and there when Steve Jobs decided that Apple would implement these marvels . PARC didn't really give Apple folks the technology so much as the vision . Some time later , Apple took more from PARC when it hired ...
Page 344
... took out ads in The Wall Street Journal , a radical move given the skepticism with which personal computers were greeted in corpo- rate circles . In three years , sales went to $ 300 million . Lotus 1-2-3 took the spreadsheet concept ...
... took out ads in The Wall Street Journal , a radical move given the skepticism with which personal computers were greeted in corpo- rate circles . In three years , sales went to $ 300 million . Lotus 1-2-3 took the spreadsheet concept ...
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 Computer Apple Computer Apple II Apple's BASIC became began Bill Gates Bob Marsh browser building Byte California called chip company's computer company computer industry ComputerLand Corporation COURTESY CP/M customers device Digital Research disk drive Dompier early Ed Roberts employees Engelbart engineers Eubanks Faber Fylstra Gary Kildall hardware Heiser hobbyists Homebrew Computer Club IBM's idea IMSAI Intel interface Internet Jobs's Kapor knew language later Lee Felsenstein Lohse Lotus machine Macintosh magazine mainframe Markkula Melen memory board microcomputer microprocessor Microsoft Millard minicomputer MITS MITS's Netscape operating system Osborne PARC Paul Allen personal computer Pertec Popular Electronics problem Proc Tech Processor Technology puter Radio Shack released retail Roberts Rubinstein Sculley sell semiconductor Shrayer Silicon Valley sold Solomon Steve Jobs Steve Wozniak Tandy Terrell thing thought took users VisiCalc wanted Woz's Xerox