Apple

Apple II and IIe at the Univ. of Puget Sound then Mountain View press.

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Information Appliance – Jef Raskin and the Canon Cat

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Paul Baker and I are assembling bookshelves in the first few weeks of Information Appliance after moving to University Ave. from Jef Raskin’s house.

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Paul and Deb are juggling. Made mandatory by the juggling duo of Raskin and Straus. The hunk on the right is Jim Lewis, corporate council after a bike ride. “Wheels” often biked in from Los Gatos.

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It is not easy to find something Raskin has never seen before.  I am demonstrating how to roll a blow dart from magazine paper and the  awesome velocity and accuracy. Much wasted time ensued. That is Bana  (Tognazini) Witt in between us. She was Jef’s personal assistant at Bannister and Crumb, then at Apple. She is Apple employee number 49 and I have Jef’s number around here somewhere. 37?

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Prototype Swyft with 7 inch display. These were pretty cool.

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Swift. Stylistically very nice and I think much better than Canon Cat.

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Canon Cat.

Here is the Canon Cat brochure and a nice photo.  The brochure has some of my prose but the ad agency sapped it of poetic gravitas.

Redshift and Apple IIe / IIgs frame grabber and display.

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Contract work at Apple Computer, Inc. for Oxford, a contract work provided used by Apple.

In 1989 I was listed as the “Code Checker” on the first issue. January 1990, of “develop”, the Apple developer journal. I actually wrote or edited most of the materials and ‘shoped the various photos and figures. I also visited all the working groups looking for stories. A fun perk was I also got to see all the secret stuff so that the editorial schedule could be set up to handle new products. Note that Jim Straus is listed as a proof reader. Yes, the same Jim Straus from Information Appliance. He went to Global Village after IAI and wrote the Mac control panel for their MODEMs. Apple began building the GV MODEMs into the Macs and Jim was hired by Apple as a software engineer and control panel guru. Of course Paul Baker was back at Apple by then doing hardware, and Mino Taoyama was at UMAX making cool Mac Clones. The ‘develop’ editorial section/cubicles were on the same floor of the Bandley building as Developer Technical Services for Mac (Mac DTS) and Apple II so I got to hang out with the experts who handled bugs and developer problems and I knew a bunch of them by name and email, so it was great to meet them in person. I attended the morning problem reviews looking for material suitable for “develop” issues. I don’t know what ever happened to my boss on that. I think she was fired along with all the other middle managers when Steve Jobs came back to Apple. There were vast flotillas of female middle managers at the time and I recall thinking all the catered lunch meetings and afternoon swims in the company pool were an open invitation to clean house.

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The Editor’s taste in fonts and design left a lot to be desired, especially in terms of readability. The lower case “develop” was not negotiable either. I showed the first issue to Jef Raskin. He liked the content and the writing OK, but design and fonts got a big thumbs down. I suggested asking Scott Kim if he would like to do some work on the design but the Editor was having none of it.

My name is down there somewhere in the tiny print at the bottom.

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Bana Witt had an invitation to the 15th Reunion for the Apple II and took me along, or I drove in case she wanted to split early, which she did, but I wouldn’t. I met Woz for the first time there and took a handful of the reunion banners when I saw that everyone was leaving them behind. Note my incredibly valuable Moof button!

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Forth and the AM9511

While working at the University of Puget Sound in 1982, I was searching for a computing solution for one of the Chemistry researchers who was planning a new instrument for physical chemistry. We looked at PDP-11/xx variants and Data General’s smallest systems as well as the latest from HP, which was around $15,000 for a base system. They were all very expensive and carried additional costs for compilers and support. I had a suspicion that an Apple II could do the job but they were also too expensive when you added the risk of not knowing if I could make it work.

I had bought myself a Rockwell AIM-65 6502 computer board in about 1980 to learn about this microprocessor stuff and explore these new possibilities. I was able to teach myself 6502 assembly programming. It also had BASIC, which was quite slow. And I tried the PLM. PLM had a slow development cycle and it was difficult to expand. There were ROMs for a language called Forth, and I got a set. There was a great Forth manual for the AIM-65 and a fine fellow named Gordy Smith who would help with phone support. My AIM had 1K of RAM which was expanded to 4K after by adding a Little Buffered Mother, a PCB with slots for hardware expansion. I also bought a board for programming PROMs which allowed expansion of the Forth system in ROM. The AIM-65 has a 20 character LED 7 segment display and a 20 character wide thermal printer. Before long this got to be a handicap and I decided to make the big purchase of a Heathkit/Zenith H8 terminal, and there was an editor for Forth that was easy to use over a terminal. After a lot of messing about with analog and digital circuits to make a better vector display that the World didn’t need, I turned my attention to getting more performance from the 6502 and Forth. I made a wire-wrapped expansion board for the AMD AM9511 math coprocessor and wrote a complete interface and math library for Forth. Wow! Some things were more than 100 times faster! And I had fast floating point calculations, integer, single, and double precision, and the conversions. Transcendental functions were also on-chip and a little fancy work with the on-chip stack and I had complex arithmetic and hyperbolic functions.
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Ohio Scientific came out with a 6502 based system with a very inexpensive and massive back-plane system that allowed vast expansion. And there was a Forth for it! We got one of these for the new instrument and I began the wire-wrap boars for 12 bit ADC and DAC and the AM9511. This system had 28K of RAM and a dual 8″ floppy in a huge separate box. In the end it ran stepper motors, a 4096×4096 storage display, a plotter, shutters, and read data from a photon counter. It did all the data collection and analysis (iterative non-linear least squares fits to multiple exponential decays and phosphorescence peak separation) and plotting and all written in Forth, including the fonts for plotter and storage display — in 24K of RAM!

[About this time one of my physics professors and mentor, F.W. Slee, designed a 6502 based single board computer to use in teaching his electronics class, and we shared a lot of programming and hardware ideas. He independently developed a threaded interpreter much like Forth before ever hearing of it.]

I was able to borrow an Apple II and check the interface. I laid out a circuit board to use the AM9511 in an Apple II/IIe slot and added support for the AM9511 in FigForth and MVPForth on the Apple. I began selling the systems through an ad in Physics Today in March of 1983. I think with ad lead times, I submitted in November or December of 1982 in order to make the March issue.

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And here it is. A few years later at Information Appliance, Mino Taoyama pointed out to me that I did not need the slot address switches and decode logic I included. Doh! I had not understood the cleverness of Steve Wozniac’s expansion slot scheme, which is quite sophisticated! I think it would have taken only one decoding chip along with the AM9511.  The jumper wire is for selecting 2MHz or 4MHz coprocessor. THAT should have been on the rocker switches! Note the nice swoopy-curvey hand layout. Drat! It should have been 3 chips plus the 9511 and a single slide switch or jumper for speed selection!

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Roy Martens at Mountain View Press was interested in the package and began selling them through his ads in Forth Dimensions, the FIG Forth magazine. Forth is an unusual threaded language in which you program by extending the compiler. It is a precursor to modern (non-Lisp) object oriented programming and takes very little space to store programs and is very efficient with RAM usage. Here is the FFPF user manual cover.

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I wrote a plain old FIG Forth with a few Tom Wempe improvements for the ARM processor. The first ARM I had that actually worked was a design by Art Sobel at VLSI. It is a very cool board that had all the peripherals of a PC of the time.

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Here it is as I used it a few years later with a CF-II hard drive. 2.5GBytes I think. Lovely board don’t you think?

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