Reference

Bibliography

“The Age of Altair.” (Twenty-page product brochure.) Albuquerque, N.M.: Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems, 1975. Jim Bybee, Albuquerque, N.M., 1984.

Augarten, Stan. State of the Art: A Photographic History of the Integrated Circuit. New York: Ticknor & Fields, 1983.

—. “Ted Hoff: Engineer ‘s Engineer. ” Peninsula Times-Tribune, 29 March 1983, B-5.

“The Big-Time Beckons Minicomputers.” Business Week, 30 January 1971, p. 32.

Bylinsky, Gene. “Here Comes the Second Computer Revolution.” Fortune, November 1975, p. 134.

Ciotti, Paul. “Revenge of the Nerds.” California, July 1982, p. 72.

Fishman, Katherine Davis. The Computer Establishment. New York : McGraw-Hill, 1981.

Freiberger, Paul, and Swaine, Michael. Fire in the

Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer. Berkeley, Calif.: Osborne/McGraw-Hill, 1984.

Greenwald, John. “D-Day for the Home Computer.” Time, 7 November 1983, p. 76.

Heiserman, David L. “Minicomputers – What They Are and What They Do.” Popular Electronics, June 1972, p. 32.

Hilts, Philip J. Scientific Temperaments: Three Lives in Contemporary Science. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1984. (Includes a biography of John McCarthy, one of the inventors of timesharing.)

“How Apple Will Keep Growth Going.” Business Week, 8 February 1982, p. 66.

“In Cooperative Project Called LOCAL: Five Massachusetts Schools Pioneer Computer Education.” Educational Media, March 1970.

“Jobs, Steven.” Current Biography, 1983, pp. 204-207.

Kemeny, John. Man and the Computer. New York: Charles Scribner ‘s Sons, 1972.

Kuzela, Lab. “Building Computer Is as Easy as Apple Pie.” Industry Week, 9 June 1980, p. 80.

“MITS, Inc.: Offering Circular.” 6 November 197 3. Hyder & Co., underwriter, and The First National Bank in Albuquerque, transfer agent. Jim Bybee, Albuquerque, N.M., 1984.

Noyce, Robert N., and Hoff, Marcian E., Jr., “A History of Microprocessor Development at Intel.” IEEE Micro, 1981. Reprint AR-17 3. Santa Clara, Calif.: Intel Corporation.

Nulty, Pet er. “Apple’s Bid to Stay in the Big Time.” Fortune 7 February 1983, p. 36.

Roberts, H. Edward, and Yates, William. “Altair 8800: The Most Powerful Minicomputer Project Ever Presented – Can Be Built for Under $400.” Popular Electronics, January-February 197 5, p. 33; p. 58.

Singer, Hal, ed. Mark-8 User Group Newsletter. vol. 1, nos. 1,2,4. Lompoc, California, 1974.

Photocopy. Jonathan Titus, Blacksburg, Va., 1984.

Sklarewitz, Norman. “Born to Grow.” Inc., April 1979, p. 53.

“Surviving a Microcomputer Shift.” Business Week, 16 April 1979. Reprint. Cupertino, Calif.: Public Relations Department, Apple Computer.

“Swimming Upstream to Computer Success.” Business Week, 21 September 1968, p. 152.

“Time Sharing Zooms Through the Ceiling.” Business Week, 22 June 1968, p. 121.

Titus, Jonathan. “Build the Mark-8: Your Personal Computer.” Radio Electronics, July 1974, p. 29.

—. Computer! New York: Gernsback Publications, 1974.

 

Notes

253      “No one saw [them]… coming”: Bradbury, foreword to Augarten, State of the Art, p. iii.

“For the first two decades “: Kemeny, Man and the Computer, p. 21.

256      “When IBM started to build “: Fishman, The Computer Establishment, p. 211.

258      “This may sound trivial “: “Swimming Upstream.” Business Week, p. 153.

262      “When my washing machine breaks”: Stan Mazor, as quoted in Augarten, “Ted Hoff,” B-5.

273      “For many years”: Popular Electronics (January 1975): 4.