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Hackers, Heroes of the Computer Revolution
Who’s Who in the Computer World
The Wizards and their Machines
- Bob Albrecht: Found of People’s Computer Company who took visceral pleasure in exposing youngsters to computers.
- Apple II ][ Steve Wozniak's friendly, flaky, good-looking computer, wildly successful and the spark and soul of a thriving industry.
- Bob and Carolyn Box World-record-holding gold prospectors turned software stars, working for Sierra On-Line.
- Doug Carlston:Corporate lawyer who chucked it all to form the Broderbund software company.
- Bob Davis: Left job in liquor store to become best-selling author of Sierra On-Line computer game "Ulysses and the Golden Fleece."Success was his downfall.
- Peter Deutsch:Bad in sports, brilliant at math, Peter was still in short pants when he stubled on the TX-0 at MIT--and hacked it along with the masters.
- Steve Dompier: Homebrew member who first made the Altair sing,and later wrote the "Targe" game on the Sol which entranced Tom Snyder.
- John Draper: The notorious "Captain Crunch" who fearlessly explored the phone systems, got jailed, hacked microprocessors. Cigarettes made his violent.
- Mark Duchaineau: The young Dungeonmaster who copy-protected On-Lines disks at his whim.
- Chris Esponosa: Fourteen-year-old follower of Steve Wozniak and early Apple employee.
- Lee Felsenstein:Former "military editor" of Berkeley Barb,and hero of an imaginary science-fiction novel,he designed computers with "junkyard" approach and was central figure in Bay Area hardwareh hacking in the seventies.
- Ed Fredkin:Gentle founder of Information International, thought himself world's greates programmer until he met Stew Nelson. Father figure to hackers.
- Gordon French: Silver-haired hardware hacker whose garage held not cars but his homebrewed Chicken Hawk comptuer, then held the first Homebrew Computer Club meeting.
- Richard Garriott: Astronaut's son who, as Lord British, created Ultima world on computer disks.
- Bill Gates: Cocky wizard, Harvard dropout who wrote Altair BASIC, and complained when hackers copied it.
- Bill Gosper: Horwitz of computer keyboards, master math and LIFE hacker at MIT AI lab, guru of the Hacker Ethic and student of Chinese restaurant menus.
- Richard Greenblatt: Single-minded, unkempt, prolific, and canonical MIT hacker who went into night phase so often that he zorched his academic career. The hacker's hacker.
- John Harris: The young Atari 800 game hacker who became Sierra On-Line's star programmer, but yearned for female companionship.
- IBM-PC: IBM's entry into the personal computer market which amazingly included a bit of the Hacker Ethic,and took over. [H.E. as open architecture.]
- IBM 704: IBM was The Enemy, and this was its machine, the Hulking Giant computer in MIT’s Building 26. Later modified into the IBM 709, then the IBM 7090. Batch-processed and intolerable.
- Jerry Jewell: Vietnam vet turned programmer who founded Sirius Software.
- Steven Jobs: Visionary, beaded, non-hacking youngster who took Wozniak’s Apple II , made a lot of deals, and formed a company that would make a billion dollars.
- Tom Knight: At sixteen, an MIT hacker who would name the Incompatible Time-sharing System. Later a Greenblatt nemesis over the LISP machine schism.
- Alan Kotok:The chubby MIT student from Jersey who worked under the rail layout at TMRC, learned the phone system at Western Electric, and became a legendary TX-0 and PDP-1 hacker.
- Effrem Lipkin:Hacker-activist from New York who loved machinesbut hated their uses. Co-Founded Community Memory; friend of Felsenstein.
- LISP Machine: The ultimate hacker computer, invented mosly by Greenblatt and subject of a bitter dispute at MIT.
- “Uncle” John McCarthy: Absent-minded but brilliant MIT [later Stanford] professor who helped pioneer computer chess, artificial intelligence, LISP.
- Bob Marsh:B erkeley-ite and Homebrewer who shared garage with Felsenstein and founded Processor Technology, which made the Sol computer.
- Roger Melen: Homebrewer who co-founded Cromemco company to make circuit boards for Altair. His “Dazzler” played LIFE programs on his kitchen table.
- Louis Merton: Pseudonym for the AI chess hacker whose tendency to go catatonic brought the hacker community together.
- Jude Milhon: Met Lee Felsenstein through a classified ad in the Berkeley Barb, and became more than a friend a member of the Community Memory collective.
- Marvin Minsky: Playful and brilliant MIT prof who headed the AI lave and allowed the hackers to run free.
- Fred Moore: Vagabond pacifist who hated money, loved technology,and co-founded Homebrew Club.
- Stewart Nelson: Buck-toothed, diminutive, but fiery AI lab hackerwho connected the PDP-1 comptuer to hack the phone system. Later co-founded the Systems Concepts company.
- Ted Nelson: Self-described “innovator” and noted curmudgeon who self-published the influential Computer Lib book.
- Russel Noftsker: Harried administrator of MIT AI lab in the late sixties; later president of Symbolics company.
- Adam Osborne: Bangkok-born publisher-turned-computer-manufacturer who considered himself a philsopher. Founded Osborne Computer Company to make “adequate” machines.
- PDP-1: Digital Equipment’s first minicomputer, and in 1961 an interactive godsend to the MIT hackers and a slap in the face to IBM fascism.
- PDP-6: Designed in part by Kotok, this mainframe computer was cornerstone of AI lab, with its gorgeious instruction set and sixteen sexy registers.
- Tom Pittman:The religious Homebrew hacker who lost his wife but kept the faith with his Tiny Basic.
- Ed Roberts: Enigmatic founder of MITS company who shook the world with his Altair computer. He wanted to help people build mental pyramids.
- Steve [Slug] Russell McCarthy’s “coolie,” who hacked the Spacewar program, first videogame, on the PDP-1. Never made a dime from it.
- Peter Samson: MIT hacker, one of the first, who loved systems, trains, TX-0, music, parliamentary procedure, pranks, and hacking.
- Bob Saunders:Jolly, balding TMRC hacker who married early, hacked till late at night eating “lemon gunkies,”and mastered the “CBS Strategy on Spacewar.
- Warren Schwader: Big blond hacker from rural Wisconsin who went from the assembly line to software stardom but couldn’t reconcile the shift with his devotion to Jehovah’s Witnesses.
- David Silver: Left school at fourteen to be mascot of AI lab; maker of illicit keys and builder of a tiny robot that did the impossible.
- Dan Sokol: Long-haired prankster who reveled in revealing technological secrets at Homebrew Club. Helped “liberate” Alair BASIC on paper tape.
- Les Solomon: Editor of Popular Electroics, the puller of strings who set the computer revolution into motion.
- Marty Spergel: The Junk Man, the Homebrew member who supplied circuits and cables and could make you a deal for anything.
- Richard Stallman:The Last of the Hackers, who vowed to defend the principles of Hackerism to the bitter end. Remained at MIT until there was no one to eat Chinese food with.
- Jeff Stephenson: Thirty-year-old martial arts veteran and hacker who was astounded that joining Sierra On-Line meant enrolling in Summer Camp.
- Jay Sullivan: MAddeningly clam wizard-level programmer at Informatics who impressed Ken Williams by knowing the meaning of the word “any.”
- Dick Sunderland: Chalk-complexioned MBA who believed that firm managerialbureaucracy was a worth goal, but as president of Sierra On-Line found that hackers didn’t think that way.
- Gerry Sussman: Young MIT hacker branded “loser” because he smoked a pipe and “munged” his programs; later became “winner” by algorithmic magic.
- Margot Tommervik: With her husband Al, long-haired Margot parlayed her game show winnings into a magazine that deified the Apple Computer.
- Tom Swift Terminal: Lee Felsenstein’s legendary, never-to-be-built computer terminal which would give the user ultimate leave to get his hands on the world.
- TX-0″: Filled a small room, but in the late fifties this $3 million machine was the world’s first personal computer–for the community of MIT hackers that formed around it.
- Jim Warren: Portly purveyor of “techno-gossip” at Homebrew, he was first editor of hippie-styled Dr. Dobbs Journal, later started the lucrative Computer Faire.
- Randy Wigginton: Fifteen-year-old member of Steve Wozniak’s kiddie corps, he help Woz trundle the Apple II to Homebrew. Still in high school when he became Apple’s first software employee.
- Ken Williams: Arrogant and brilliant young programmer who saw the writing on the CRT and started Sierra On-Line to make a killing and improve society by selling games for the Apple computer.
- Roberta Williams: Ken Williams’ timid wife who rediscovered her own creativity by writing “Mystery House,” the first of her many bestselling computer games.
- Steven “Woz” Wozniak: Openhearted, technologically daring hardware hacker from San Jose suburbs. Woz built the Apple Computer for the pleasure of himself and friends.
