Kay Savetz

@savetz@oldbytes.space
1.3K Followers
256 Following
341 Posts
I've posted my annual letter summarizing my computer history work in the past year. It’s an opportunity to take stock, reflect on accomplishments, and make a plan for the new year. It's my longest-ever "Wrapped" letter, signifying a productive year! https://www.patreon.com/posts/kays-2024-119233408
Christmas morning 40 years ago, I got an Apple //c

Today I published my interview with Bob Stein. He worked at Atari Research in 1981-1982, hired by Alan Kay. He worked almost exclusively on an encyclopedia project: a potential collaboration between Atari and Encyclopaedia Britannica that did not turn into a product. He saved all sorts of interesting documents from his time at Atari, including a 1982 collection of nine colorful pencil drawings (drawn by Disney animator Glen Keane) depicting futuristic scenarios where people use a computerized encyclopedia to get information.

Video: https://youtu.be/No7MyFafWqU Audio: https://ataripodcast.libsyn.com/antic-interview-442-bob-stein-atari-research

Support my patreon to help me keep doing these interviews: http://patreon.com/savetz

Bob Stein, Atari's (attempted) Encyclopedia Project

YouTube

Yesterday I took possession of three Texas Instruments 99/4A computers. Complete with a speech synthesizer and the giant expansion box!

I’ve had these as a retro collector before, but wasn’t really in the mood to play with them so let them all go. That was years ago and now I am vibing with this machine. The last time I really paid any attention to them was when I went to TI Fest West in 2017

so: what is the state of the art? What’s the upgrade to get? I remember there was some sort of tiny box that was the equivalent of the expansion bread box. Doesn’t look like Fujinet is for sale yet. Advice appreciated.

Cc @tschak @floppydays

275 issues of MicroTimes Magazine are now available at Internet Archive, with the blessing of the publisher. The magazines can be read online or downloaded, and are full text searchable. https://archive.org/details/microtimes?tab=collection&sort=date

Published starting in 1984, MicroTimes magazine was "California’s Computer Magazine”. Published in two editions (Northern and Southern California localizations) MicroTimes provided interviews, instructions, product reviews and opinion pieces related to all manner of home and business computers.

Internet Archive: Digital Library of Free & Borrowable Books, Movies, Music & Wayback Machine

Do I know anyone who can read DVD-RAM cartridges? (And yes, I already asked @foone )
#ATARI in the NYT #crossword puzzle

Great news — the next EIGHT episodes of Famous Computer Cafe have been digitized and uploaded to Internet Archive! You can listen now. They sound GREAT! It's amazing that these tapes are in such great condition after so many years (so far, at least, fingers crossed.)

It's thrilling to hear these episodes, which are 39 and 40 years old, and literally haven't been heard since they originally aired.

These episodes are available for everyone in the world to enjoy immediately. They are not private or for "backers only" — so if you hear something interesting, feel free to link to them. You're also welcome to link to the GoFundMe, which is still accepting contributions. (https://www.gofundme.com/f/digitizing-the-famous-computer-cafe)

I haven't listened to every minute of every show yet, so I'm excited to find out what gems you discover. If you have an Internet Archive account, you can leave comments as "reviews" in the Internet Archive items, or discuss what you hear on your favorite social media.

https://archive.org/details/famous-computer-cafe?sort=-addeddate

Donate to Digitizing "The Famous Computer Cafe" radio show, organized by Kay Savetz

TLDR: Help digitize 54 episodes of The Famous Computer Cafe, a 1980s radio… Kay Savetz needs your support for Digitizing "The Famous Computer Cafe" radio show

gofundme.com

I just got word that there may be a few more tapes available, which will add to the expenses. (The fundraising goal covers purchase of the tapes, shipping, and digitization. Only if funding exceeds that will I get paid for my time managing this project.)

I am asking the computer history community to share these expenses to preserve an amazing part of computing history that was thought to be lost forever. Once digitized, the recordings will go online for free at Internet Archive, where they will be machine-transcribed and full-text searchable.

You can listen to the first two episodes that we’ve digitized right now. They probably have’t been heard since they were first broadcast. The Dec 7 1984 episode includes an interview with Steve Roberts, who was riding around the United States in a teched-out, computerized recumbent bicycle. https://archive.org/details/the-famous-computer-cafe-1984-12-07_Steve_Roberts The Jan 9 1985 episode includes an interview with Barbara Elman, publisher of Word Processing News. https://archive.org/details/the-famous-computer-cafe-1985-01-09_Barbara_Elman

The Famous Computer Cafe 1984-12-07 Steve Roberts : The Famous Computer Cafe : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

The Famous Computer Cafe 1984-12-07 Steve RobertsAired on KFOX.Steven K. Roberts (born September 25, 1952) is an American journalist, writer, cyclist,...

Internet Archive

But all the episodes (except one) were lost years ago. We thought they were gone forever.

Until now — thanks to extraordinary luck, I have purchased 35 reel-to-reel tapes that should contain roughly 54 episodes.

Buying the tapes was a gamble. There was no guarantee that they weren’t blanked or recorded over. But, it appears that the recordings survived! I have hired a trusted, professional digitizer to digitize them (I can handle 7.5” reels myself but don’t have the equipment for these hefty 10.5” reels.)

According to the labels, these tapes should have interviews with Bill Gates, Timothy Leary, Douglas Adams, Bill Atkinson (creator of MacPaint), Steven Levy (journalist), Jack Tramiel (Atari), John Reese (Tronix), Joel Berez (Infocom), and many more. They aired Oct 1994 through July 1985.

Here's the inventory of tapes that I bought: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1zx56qfqhKMmgaGyN6ZQ1lqaaNAohDXqgRHS1qM_vID0/edit?usp=sharing

I am raising money to pay for these tapes and for them to be professionally digitized. ...

Famous Computer Cafe tapes - Google Drive