On Aug 25, 2012, at 15:27 , Brian Walters wrote:

> Quoting Bob Sullivan <rf.sulli...@gmail.com>:
> 
>> Darren,
>> Some of us still hold a grudge on Apple.
>> We remember our first Apple PC's
>> and how everything Apple cost 2X what the IBM machines cost,
>> how nothing - printer, disc drives, monitors, memory had to be Apple
>> or it wouldn't work!
> 
> 
> 
> Thanks, Bob.  I've also got a long memory.  I was trying to frame a reply 
> along those lines and you've saved me the trouble  :-)>

Those of us who have used Pentax all our lives, for whatever reason, lens 
compatibility, rugged and innovative products, should know better. Apple would 
not be where they are today if they didn't provide compatibility with the 
hardware tools their customers wanted or needed to do their work. Even today 
though, with a pant-load of software capable of easily porting "PC" programs to 
"Macs", a large percentage of companies don't bother. They are running the same 
hardware, idiots. Port! I think it's because so many liked to fiddle as kids, 
so they went to the dark side and got PCs. So they could. Now that they are 
older, these kids are scared they can't learn anything new, so they shy away 
from Apple. While they were sneering at us, Apple stock sold for $13 a share. 
Whose sneering now?

The first use I got out of my first Apple Product, a ][+, was writing CP/M code 
to make my Epson Printer listen to the Apple. Pretty simple really. About two 
lines of hex to tell the computer that is was attached to something other than 
a line printer. I learned Wozniac's method of writing data to floppy disks, and 
would repair friends disk with errors by printing out all the code on the disk, 
finding where the error was by following the sectors sequentially as they 
jumped around all over the directory, mapping it (tedious!) until I discovered 
what was missing, or garbled, and repairing it. When Apple computers (Mac) went 
to 48, then 64 bit processes, I gave up on that endeavor.

When the Mac came out in 1984, it was shortly followed, thanks to Adobe selling 
Jobs the font technology used by Apple Laser Printers, which put tens of 
thousands of printers and font designers working at home. "Desktop Printing" 
became a buzzword in those years. That was the only time I can think of that 
for a year or two you had to buy an Apple printer to do the job. Soon HP and 
Brother came out with similar printers, which ALL cost too much because of the 
very high per unit prices Adobe charged Apple and the others to use ROMs 
running their patented font drawing software whose name I cannot think of now. 

That lasted for a while, then Apple addressed the costs by coming out with 
their own (or purchased) fonts design called TrueType that gave damn near the 
quality of Adobe's system. Apple gave those away, followed by most all fonts 
being converted into TrueType. This took the wind out of Adobe's profit column. 
They had saved enough money to buy Aldus and it's PageMaker layout program, 
which put me out of a job in the Aldus division that was troubleshooting 
PageMaker 4.0 against Microsoft Windows version 3.0, (which was really vers. 
1.1 which indicated how far behind in the GUI movement they were, so they 
renamed it 3.0) that was taking forever to get out of Alpha. Alpha, Beta, back 
to Alpha kept a paycheck in my pocket. My team was kept busy by designing a 
little text editor for PageMaker while we waited on Gate's boys and girls to 
get their shit together. We called it Ted. We gave it rudimentary graphical 
capabilities which gave me a few more weeks as we built a series of graphics 
showing what it could do to be used in promotion.

But I digress. Apple's concept practically from the start, especially when Jobs 
was at the helm, was to sell products that, even though complex and innovative 
in their design, made few demands on their users. "They just worked" "Plug and 
Play" etc. One paid a price for this, of course. In return, Apple Mac users 
never had to open their equipment or learn how it went together. Some did of 
course. I made many friends and grew a decent client list as an Apple 
Consultant after starting one of the first Apple clubs in Fredericksburg, VA in 
1980, called the "Rappahanock Apple Group". Our newsletter, a dot matrix gem, 
was mastheaded "the RAG". I still have the plaque they gave me when I moved 
away to come to Seattle in 1988. 

When I was let go at Aldus/Adobe, I went into business as a consultant. Never 
got rich. Made a few bucks selling and installing telecommunications systems, 
hawking "First Class BBS" s/w out of Toronto for a few years in Seattle, 
turning the Downtown Business Users Groups (dBUG)'s single line BBS in 1989 
into a 22 line BBS by 1994. Big thick cable of 2-pair dropped into my house, 
with room inside of it for 48 lines. Sadly the local switch could not handle 
any more connections. I was voted off the board of directors in 1995 because 
they did not believe the club needed to transition to a something called the 
Internet websight to serve the members. The politics and treachery of one of 
the board members did me in, as being a threat to the group by trying to run 
them into the ground financially. Funny butt. They went ahead and did exactly 
what I had proposed within six months. Pulled all those expensive 56k baud 
modems out of my house too.


-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
the directions.

Reply via email to