On Tue, 14 Nov 2017, ben via cctalk wrote:
Computer Science seems to be mostly developed in the 1968 - 1973 time frame by average people with access with a (personal) computer with about 32K of memory.

We could use some clarification of your terminology.
Because MOST people do not consider any of the computers in 1968 - 1973 to be "personal" computers. Although the 4004 was announced in November 1971, commercial availability of kits, etc. such as Altair, Imsai, wasn't until 1975.

An individual TERMINAL connecting to a computer, perhaps, but computers owned by an individual were rare.

Admittedly, in 1962, Mauchly predicted "personal computer", and in 1968, HP referred to the 9100A as a "personal computer".

Having heard discussion of 4004 and predictions, in 1972, I left aerospace (which had not completely recovered from a collapse), declaring that I would get back into computers as soon as "tabletop computers" became practical and available to me. (I did not foresee them being called "personal computers"). I intently watched the early S100 machines, but didn't get back into computers until TRS80/Apple/PET. The first one that I owned was a TRS80 for $400 (I supplied my own monitor and cassetter). (4K Level I, which I brought up to 16K, and paid for Level II upgrade. Then Expansion Interface and Serial Port ("Radio-Shack 232"), supplying my own drives, RAM, printer, etc.


All the new software development was Time Sharing of some kind, or a revised BETTER our NEW programming language, that wants faster and larger core memory and the deluxe Binary-Trinary-Decary
virtual ALU*.
That why I suspect the state of computers is so dismal today.

Yes, 1968-1973 had time-sharing for personal computing, but not "personal computers"


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

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