WORD PROCESSING VIA PUNCH CARDS
 
Need  to insert the paragraph in a different place? 
Shift those  cards in the  deck <grin!>
 
 
Seriously though... anything helps  me... I have never written long  things 
in a linear manner...
when I was  a kid  I  would  write the stuff   down  then cut the 
paragraphs out and rearrange them and tape them to a new  piece of paper. 
 
Then I discovered  Girls!
 
How wonderfully  they  did  with shorthand  and  typing.
 
Ed#
 
 
 
 
In a message dated 9/10/2017 2:24:31 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,  
cctalk@classiccmp.org writes:

On Sun,  10 Sep 2017, couryho...@aol.com wrote:
> then..... who was.....  the  TRUE  first?

Michael Shrayer's girlfriend?
And what  motivated him to write "Electric Pencil"?
Jerry started using it early on,  but he was NOT the first user of it.

Before Electric Pencil, what  microcomputer word-processor programs 
preceded that?   I  seriously doubt that Michael Shrayer was the only one 
to write  one.

What word-processor programs existed prior to micros?

If I  were to have had lower case capability with punch cards (I only had 
access  to common models of 026 and 029), I would have used punchcards for 
word  processing!  I did use them for such trivia as the single page list  
of names and phone numbers that I needed.
In 1968, I did  word-processing on a time-sharing system, while I was 
working at Goddard  Space Flight Center.  THAT, of course, was not 
PUBLISHED work.   My first PUBLISHED book was my Honda book, for which I 
used  TRS-80.
Microcomputers were NOT the first computers capable of  word-processing.
The word processing capability of late 1960s time sharing  systems WAS 
being used for manuscripts, often on the sly to keep the boss  from 
freaking out over the bills for use!

You are not likely to  find the "TRUE first", only "A first", or "some of 
the first".
Maybe  even the "FIRST to be a major best-seller".  THEN you have a  
researchable claim, without all of the unpublished manuscripts in  attics.
Jerry's [disputable] claim was to have been the first author to  write a
PUBLISHED BOOK on computer.

And, there were authors using  computers, for whom using the computer was 
NOT an important aspect to  them.  Some published books prior to his may 
have been written on  computer, without having made a big deal out of that!


Just like  Osborne was NOT "THE FIRST" portable microcomputer.  We had the  
Elcompco earlier (a few different single board machines with 5" monitor  
in a Halliburton attache case), and I know that we were not the  first.

--
Grumpy Ol' Fred            ci...@xenosoft.com

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