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Byte (stylized as BYTE) was a microcomputer magazine, influential in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s because of its wide-ranging editorial coverage. [1] Byte started in 1975, shortly after the first personal computers appeared as kits advertised in the back of electronics magazines. Byte was published monthly, with an initial yearly ...
Robert Frank Tinney (born November 22, 1947) is an American contemporary illustrator [ 1] known for his monthly cover illustrations for the microcomputer publication Byte magazine [ 2][ 3] spanning over a decade. In so doing, Tinney became one of the first artists to create a broad yet consistent artistic concept for the computing world ...
Wayne Green. Founding the computer magazines 80 Micro, Byte, RUN and others. Wayne Sanger Green II (September 3, 1922 – September 13, 2013) [1][2] was an American publisher, writer, and consultant. Green was editor of CQ magazine before he went on to found 73, 80 Micro, Byte, CD Review, Cold Fusion, Kilobaud Microcomputing, RUN, InCider, and ...
The Cromemco TV Dazzler introductory advertisement, April 1976. The Cromemco Dazzler was a graphics card for S-100 bus computers introduced in a Popular Electronics cover story in 1976. [1] It was the first color graphics card available for microcomputers. [2] The Dazzler was the first of a succession of increasingly capable graphics products ...
The title of the magazine is BYTE. Spelled on the cover of the magazine as B-Y-T-E, all in capitals. In addition to the many valid points which support naming the article BYTE, nobody has actually demonstrated that it is NOT an acronym. The assumption that BYTE refers only to byte as in 8 digital bits is simply an assumption.
T. File:Tap magazine, issue 9 cover.jpg; File:The Home Computer Advanced Course issue 85.jpg; File:The Home Computer Course issue 4.jpg; File:The Micro User issue 1.jpg
Website. jerrypournelle.com. Jerry Eugene Pournelle (/ pʊərˈnɛl /; August 7, 1933 – September 8, 2017) was an American scientist in the area of operations research and human factors research, a science fiction writer, essayist, journalist, and one of the first bloggers. [1] In the 1960s and early 1970s, he worked in the aerospace industry ...
In 1989, a cover story in Byte magazine announced the Apricot VX FT Server as the world's first machine to incorporate the Intel 80486 microprocessor. [9] This machine, designed by Bob Cross, was a fault-tolerant file server based on Micro Channel Architecture, incorporating an external RAM cache and its own UPS.