*Proto-PC Inventor, and inspiration for Microsoft, Dr. Henry Edward (Ed)
Roberts passes

*Dr. Henry Edward Roberts is best known for inventing the Altair 8800, a
personal computer that would spark the home computer era. Dr. Roberts died
yesterday after complications from pneumonia. Dr. Roberts founded Micro
Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS), which was originally started
to sell electronics kits to model rocket hobbyists. The firm began to
struggle in the mid-1970s, and Dr. Roberts began developing a computer kit
for hobbyists. The result was the Altair 8800 with an Intel 8080
microprocessor. The kit was available for $395 and was featured on the cover
of Popular Electronics in 1975. This cover inspired Paul Allen and Bill
Gates to contact Roberts with an offer to write software code that would
help people program the machine. Allen and Gates eventually moved to
Albuquerque (home to MITS) and founded Micro-Soft to develop their software.
Dr. Roberts eventually sold his company and retired to Georgia where he
eventually fulfilled a life long dream of earning a medical degree and
became a small-town doctor. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak was saddened to
learn of Robert's death stating in an email, "He [Roberts] took a critically
important step that led to everything we have today."

The first link leads to a story from the New York Times about the passing of
Dr. Roberts. The second link will take visitors to a tribute remembering Ed
Roberts from Bill Gates and Paul Allen. The third link leads to a story on
the saving of the newsstand that sold Paul Allen the famous Popular
Electronics magazine that started it all. The fourth link will take visitors
to a history of MITS and Altair 8800. *The fifth link leads to the New
Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science StartUp Gallery*. This is a
permanent exhibition dedicated to the personal computer revolution and the
many breakthroughs that happened in Albuquerque. If all this talk has you
thinking about how far computers have come, the last link should suit you,
as it leads to a piece (audio or transcript) from NPR's All Things
Considered which takes a look at the 40 years since the birth of the
Internet.
*
*

PC Maker, Inspiration for Microsoft Dies in Ga.
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2010/04/01/us/AP-US-Obit-Computer-Designer.html

Remembering Ed Roberts
 http://www.thegatesnotes.com/Thinking/article.aspx?ID=126

New operator found for iconic Harvard Square newsstand
 http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2009/01/new_operator_fo.html

MITS and Altair history
 http://www.retrotechnology.com/herbs_stuff/d_altair.html

New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science: StartUp Gallery
 http://www.startupgallery.org/

40 Years Later, Looking Back At the Internet's Birth
 http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=114376728

Dr. Henry Edward Roberts is best known for inventing the Altair 8800, a
personal computer that would spark the home computer era. Dr. Roberts died
yesterday after complications from pneumonia. Dr. Roberts founded Micro
Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS), which was originally started
to sell electronics kits to model rocket hobbyists. The firm began to
struggle in the mid-1970s, and Dr. Roberts began developing a computer kit
for hobbyists. The result was the Altair 8800 with an Intel 8080
microprocessor. The kit was available for $395 and was featured on the cover
of Popular Electronics in 1975. This cover inspired Paul Allen and Bill
Gates to contact Roberts with an offer to write software code that would
help people program the machine. Allen and Gates eventually moved to
Albuquerque (home to MITS) and founded Micro-Soft to develop their software.
Dr. Roberts eventually sold his company and retired to Georgia where he
eventually fulfilled a life long dream of earning a medical degree and
became a small-town doctor. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak was saddened to
learn of Robert's death stating in an email, "He [Roberts] took a critically
important step that led to everything we have today."

The first link leads to a story from the New York Times about the passing of
Dr. Roberts. The second link will take visitors to a tribute remembering Ed
Roberts from Bill Gates and Paul Allen. The third link leads to a story on
the saving of the newsstand that sold Paul Allen the famous Popular
Electronics magazine that started it all. The fourth link will take visitors
to a history of MITS and Altair 8800. The fifth link leads to the New Mexico
Museum of Natural History and Science StartUp Gallery. This is a permanent
exhibition dedicated to the personal computer revolution and the many
breakthroughs that happened in Albuquerque. If all this talk has you
thinking about how far computers have come, the last link should suit you,
as it leads to a piece (audio or transcript) from NPR's All Things
Considered which takes a look at the 40 years since the birth of the
Internet.
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-- 
==========================================
J. T. Johnson
Institute for Analytic Journalism -- Santa Fe, NM USA
www.analyticjournalism.com
505.577.6482(c)                                    505.473.9646(h)
http://www.jtjohnson.com                 [email protected]

"Be Your Own Publisher"
http://indiepubwest.com
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