BYTE.com
RSS feed

Newsletter
Free E-mail Newsletter from BYTE.com
Email Address
First Name
Last Name




 
    
             
BYTE.com > The Monitor > 1999 > August

Two Gigs, And Growing

By Fred Langa

August 23, 1999

(Two Gigs, And Growing :  Page 1 of 7 )



In this Article
Two Gigs, And Growing
1975
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
Former Byte editor-in-chief Fred Langa offers a two-part retrospective on BYTE from its humblest beginnings to today.

Part One: The First Decade
BYTE was born in 1975, back when the idea of a computer of your own was something out of science fiction. The microcomputer industry was just getting started. In fact, there wasn't even a good name for small computers -- that is, not until BYTE coined the term "personal computer" in its May 1976 issue.

That's right -- the very term "PC" is a BYTE innovation. You don't have to take my word for it: The Oxford English Dictionary (considered the final arbiter on the origins and use of the English language) cites BYTE as the original source for PC and other terms such as back-slash, boot, bulletin (as in BBS), CD-ROM, clone, hacker, lap (as in laptop), transportable, users, WYSIWYG, and half a dozen others.

After you've read the time line info, click on over to the threaded chat area and tell us your favorite Byte anecdote or story, especially if you?re a long-term Byte reader. What did you like about Byte when you first read it? What innovations do you remember seeing first in its pages? What would you like to see in the future? Join in!

BYTE was there at the start and helped define the whole personal-computing genre as it grew and matured from a hobbyist pastime to an essential cornerstone of modern business.

As the computer industry changed, so did BYTE. For example, as off-the-shelf products began to replace the home-brew system of the earliest days, BYTE published the industry's first stand-alone and comparative reviews, built the world's first magazine-sponsored computer-testing lab, and published the first widely used microcomputer benchmarks.

 Page 1 of 7 Next page


BYTE.com > The Monitor > 1999 > August
Dr. Dobb's Media Center

What Zope Did Wrong (and How It's Being Fixed)
Dr. Dobb's talks with Lennart Regebro about the many things that Zope 2 did right and did wrong. Lennart has also been one of the driving forces behind Five, the integration of Zope 3 technologies into Zope 2.

Ubuntu and the Software Around It
Dr. Dobb's interviews Ubuntu's Gerry Carr about the Linux-based Ubuntu operating sytem and the application lifecycle tools -- such as the recently released Launchpad -- that surround it.

BYTE.com Store

BYTE CD-ROM
NOW, on one CD-ROM, you can instantly access more than 8 years of BYTE.
 
The Best of BYTE: Volume 2 - Heuristic Algorithms
The Best of BYTE: Volume 2 - Heuristic Algorithms
In this volume of Best of BYTE, we explore the emergence of some heuristic algorithms. Although we have only scratched the surface of this intriguing subject, we hope we've suggested the potential of the synthesis of heuristics and algorithms.

© 2008 Think Services, Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, United Business Media Limited
Site comments: webmaster@byte.com
Web Sites: BYTE.com, dotnetjunkies.com, Dr. Dobb's Journal, SD Expo, Sys Admin, sqljunkies.com, Unixreview



MarketPlace
simple helix is the most trusted name in the hosting industry! Join us and host with the experts!
HP network adapters help get the most from your virtualized servers. Learn more at HP.IntelVT.com.
Automatically capture customer crash data, no debugger required. Support for .NET, C++, OS X, Java.
Understand C/C++ code in less time. A new team member ? Inherited legacy code ? Get up to speed faster with Crystal Flow for C/C++. Code-formatting improves readability. Flowcharts are integrated with code browser. Export flowcharts to Visio.
Develop 10 times faster ! ALM, IDE, .Net, RAD, 5GL, Database, 5GL, 64-bit, etc. Free Express version
Wanna see your ad here?
 

web2