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137 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 700
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Title: HPR0700: Tech Tales of April's Past
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0700/hpr0700.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:06:41
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---
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.
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Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. It's Mr. Gadget. Once again, and I thought I would
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call you with a brief hour, a little talk about the history of computing, and as I move
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forward my history with the Unix and getting over to Linux eventually. And it seems particularly
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apropos. And so the subject of today is because of the time of the year that it is. And I was
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reminded of this recently because of some other podcasts and things like that that celebrated
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this. And there's a grand tradition of it. So years ago, and I already mentioned Don Lancaster,
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he was the one who wrote the original TV typewriter cookbook, which actually taught you how to use
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a bunch of discreet ICs to build something that would actually put a TV signal onto a relatively
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cheap composite monitor. And you could hook a surplus keyboard to it, and you could use that in
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lieu of a teletype machine, which was a big mechanical hard to move around hard to maintain
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kind of the device for your input output of your alpha numeric characters into your very,
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very early computers like your inside computers and things like that, your MITF computer, your
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original computers where you were flipping switches. Or as I have talked about on some of my
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single board computers that I owned, if you were lucky, you had one of those. We actually had a
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hex keyboard instead of flipping all the 8 bits of the byte and then pushing another switch to
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actually store that, you could actually type in the hex equivalents of those bytes and program the
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microphone computers that way. But if you really have the money, you could have a teletype machine,
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or you could have this electronic teletype machine from Don Lancaster, and he has continued through the
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years to write a lot of articles that were in various magazines and write on technology right up to
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this day. And if you go out and search for Don Lancaster on Google, you'll come up with this
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site first thing. And it's still an interesting site. He has quite the character Don is. You'll find
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some references there to his very, very cogent arguments against patterning anything. According to
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Don, not only should software be free and open, but ideas should also be free and open and patterning
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ideas is a patent-leaf stupid idea. So he's an interesting character, as I said, amongst other things
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after the initial circuitry for the typewriter cookbook and some other early kinds of things there
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in the world of computing. I'm pretty sure that Don also came up with some of the first circuits
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that would allow you to take the signals from your computer and form them into audio tones that would
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be something that you could store on a cassette recorder, and then load those back in to store
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your programs and read them back. And I think he was one of the people that was a pioneer in
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that regard, also, and very types of things. He took to very much to post scripts when that
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became available as a language, and the usage of post script was first, actually, you know, it's
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around all over the place now, but then again, the day, the way that he used post script, it was if
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you have a laser writer printer, which was of course one of the first laser printers that came
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for computers, and one of the first printers that was really capable of producing high quality
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kind of output from the computer, and that was the Apple laser writer product. And it was actually
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a post script interpreter that you would use to actually produce the things there on the laser writer.
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And Don discovered that this was actually one of the most powerful computers that went
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to Don, and one of the most powerful computers that he owned in terms of its graphical capabilities.
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And he really, really leveraged that to the point that he was writing post script code, it's
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actually a programming language, and he was writing post script code that would not only do
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graphical things that would be output on paper, he would just use it as a computational engine,
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and take the results that would come out of the post script engine that was built into the laser
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writer. And he was a real, did a proponent of writing post script code, and using your laser
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writer to actually run that code as an adjunct to the computational power you had in the computer
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that the laser writer was connected to. And I know how it sounds crazy, but Don could convince you
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that this was a good idea. I mean, just like it's really, really good arguments against patents,
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and I actually agree with them on the patent kind of idea.
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So he really, really has some really out there out of the box kinds of ideas, including the
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usage of post script, as I said. A brief sojourn here off to the modern world, Bart Bouchantz,
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who quite often talks across the pond with Allison Sheridan on the Musclecath,
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Bart hasn't been doing that recently because he's had some health issues, and we're all thinking
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about Bart, and wishing him well, and getting back onto the internet as quickly as possible.
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Bart has many, many times railed against Dolby, and well, he might, for their security kinds of
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issues. And he has really, really questioned this whole idea that why is it that PDF documents,
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and a PDF reader, has the ability to actually run code snippets. Why would I have a PDF reader
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that could run code he has limited many times in terms of security holes?
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I can't find any corroborating evidence to this, but I would swear that PDF initially stood for
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post script document language, not portable document format, but post script document format,
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yet uses the post script language to render the document, and thus any reader has to be able to
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run the post script language that is included as part of that rendering process.
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Anyway, back to the, what passes for a subject gather here, the columns that Don read were always
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one of the most interesting things about having a subscription or picking up a copy of any one of
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the various magazines that he wrote columns for, and he would be writing columns for computer magazines,
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where he would be talking about his post script thing, he would also be writing columns for
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popular electronics or radio electronics, the various electronics magazines, and he had regular
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columns in these magazines for years, and one year he really had the going on the not only did I
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not have enough money for a laser writer to even consider this whole using the post script engine
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for other computational usage, but he also was using the Apple computers, the Apple 2 computer,
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specifically which he was connecting up to the laser writer, and he really really got me at one
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point in a article that he wrote, because he was talking about a new board that you can plug in
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to the Apple 2 computer. Now, one advantage of the Apple 2 is it had its own bus, like that S-100
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bus I've been talking about, or various computer buses, so this idea of having expansion boards that
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you can plug in is not a new kind of a thing, it's been around since almost the beginning of
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micro computing, we figured out we wanted the bus to be able to plug things into it pretty much
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right away, even that Cosmic Elf had a little connector for a bus to plug in a video card into it
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that eventually came out. So, there was this new card that he was working on, and he was working
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with a company that had come to him, and the company had a special chip that they had designed,
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and he had worked with them on the board, and he'd worked with them on the software to run on the
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Apple 2, and of course the board would only plug into an Apple 2, and the software would only run
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in the Apple 2 environment, but it was really exciting, and he was finally able to announce
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that this board was going to come on to the market, and the really exciting thing is it would use
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the RS-232 communications, and you'd actually need to have two Apple 2s. Now, in my mind, I'm thinking,
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I can't even afford one Apple 2, Don, you're killing me here, I need two Apple 2s. What the heck
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would I need to have Apple 2s for, and why would I want these boards communicating? I mean, we had
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modems, and so it had to be something more. Well, you could do it faster, of course, if they were
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connected directly to one another, but the really technical aspect of this would be using it with
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a modem, and of course, depending on the speed of your modem, it would be slower to accomplish the
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process, but there was a tiny little chamber, a tiny little opening with a door on it at the back
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of this board, and it was about enough room to put in a small piece of paper, or maybe something
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the size of a quarter, or something like that, could fit into this little slot in the back.
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But the amazing thing was the special chip that they had, and the special solter that they
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have had the ability to dematerialize the item that you put in the slot in one machine,
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transfer via the digital signal to the other machine, and rematerialize this on the other side.
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I mean, this was a Star Trek transporter, admittedly not over radio waves, right, but over wires,
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or over the modem. And I mean, I was wrapped in just giving all the technical details
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about how everything would work, and it was a very small chamber at this point because of the
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technical limitations of where they had gotten so far, but they could see, of course, you know,
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what the potential was in the future as this technology would develop. And then he announced
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the really exciting part about it, which was you could actually hook up to four computers together,
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and one computer could have the quarter in it, and the other three computers would each have a
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quarter in their slots at the end of the process, three quarters for one. Then it hit me that it
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was April, and this was April Phil's column, which he did every year, and he sucked me in totally
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until that last column, when he talked about giving three quarters for one.
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And so I wish you a happy April fool. I'd also like somebody to explain to me why it is
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in this April fool's because no way shape or form in the way that I count years, even with the old
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calendar, right, September 7, October 8, November 9, December 10, right? Even if you count that way,
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I can't figure out how the Julian calendar had the first of the year being April. But
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happy April fool, there were lots of April fool's just going on here in terms of some of the
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podcasts that I heard and things like that. And I thought that was an interesting old story because
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of that tight, you know, the people who were working on the computers were all the Star Trek fans,
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and of course, he sucked us all in. To this day, he still has a book that you should look for on
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the youth's bookshelf called the Incredible Secret Money Machine, which is an idea of how to
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make a living from multiple sources of income. The basic gist of the book is you don't want to have
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all of your dollar bills coming from a single source. You would rather have a bunch of quarters
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coming from a couple of sources, or even better, a whole series of dimes that nickels coming
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from multiple sources. So, any single one of those persons tries up, you lose all your income.
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But he, of course, expands on this to a great extent. There were two different versions of this.
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I own the original edition of that, and I think I also have a copy of his second edition.
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On his side, I think he's got plans to actually put up the text of the second edition of the book
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eventually online, but right now he's got some of the articles and things from that. So,
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I encourage you to go out, check out Don Lancaster's site, just Google for him there, and see he's
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got all kinds of interesting ideas, and even to this day, he's doing all kinds of interesting things
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with technology, well worth the time and effort, and you're kind of looking at the past and the
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present here of computing. And with that, I'd like to wish you a very, very happy April, and
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hope you didn't get too bad, and we'll talk to you next time. This is Mr. Gadgett,
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and I'll be out here on the technological frontier, Blake from the Trail of the Hoodie. Bye now.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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HPR is sponsored by Carol.net, so head on over to C-A-R-O dot N-E-T for all of us in the
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