Computer Market Phases (Was: Our fine educational system (was: Login on VMS))

From: John Honniball <John.Honniball_at_uwe.ac.uk>
Date: Wed Sep 27 09:11:35 2000

On Wed, 27 Sep 2000 09:23:08 -0400 Jerome Fine
<jhfine_at_idirect.com> wrote:
> I think that it would be helpful to have a discussion on the different
> phases of the "computer" market with a view to identifying the
> characteristics to be expected for the next phase. Based on
> 40 years of seeing the market charge, I have a bit of perspective,
> but I am probably so out of touch with the current market that
> I don't have the needed insight to identify the next phase. So, how
> about some comments?

I think of the time from 1977 to about 1984 as the "Punk"
period in computer design. Back then, anybody with a crazy
idea and a soldering iron could build a machine, scribble a
manual and sell to the unsuspecting public. Rather like
some bands of the time :-)

The results were nowhere near as polished and professional
as later versions, but they were cheap and, well, lively.
I'm thinking of the kind of machine where you got a bare
PCB, seven-segment LEDs, a bad TV modulator, a badly
photocopied manual, awful keyboards and the like.

I think one of the biggest signs of a Punk computer is the
lack of any plastic mouldings -- punks can't afford
toolmaking for that! Ship it in a bent-up metal box!
Botch something together with fibreglass!

PS. Punk computers aren't beige. Orange, maybe, not beige.

--
John Honniball
Email: John.Honniball_at_uwe.ac.uk
University of the West of England
Received on Wed Sep 27 2000 - 09:11:35 BST

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