I remember playing around with the early Votrax. What I remember is a little embarrassing. WE used to try to make the Votrax cuss. No matter what you typed, it wouldn't say a cuss word. Sounds dumb now but when I was in my teens it was fascinating to me that we couldn't get that synth to cuss. On Jun 6, 2009, at 4:22 PM, Gary W. Kelly wrote:
> > Hi, > > Some of us were around even before the Echo and Cricket. My first > Apple was an Apple II-I--from 1977, and I was already out of undergrad > school and working before Apple began. > > Anyone remember the Vocoder, or early Votrax? > > Yes, I do remember Mountain Hardware, and owned one of their > products. The card was a graphics card that handled sprites, did > large print, and did have a limited speech capability. That came out > in the 1980's after we had floppy drives, and were no longer loading > from a cassette tape! Back in those days, one wrote all programs of a > special nature oneself--often in Apple Basic, which came out in the > late 70's. The first basic was an Integer Basic, which is why the II-I > was called a 2-I. It had no floating point basic. Bill Gates wrote > the basic for Apple, and Apple had the good sense to buy it from him > outright. The old machines came with 48K of RAM! We did a lot with > them. > > It was very exciting to get fancy new hardware with 1980--the Apple II > Plus, had 64K, floppy drives!--and even a modem that was 300 baud, as > opposed to the older ones of 110. Dennis Hayes was a young professor > at Georgia Tech then, and just getting started. > > Visicalc was written for the Apple in the early 1980's, and started > the real revolution to the PC. I remember being excited to get a > chip for my old Apple that let me have upper and lower case, so I > could better do word processing with it--with a product called Tedit, > and later Apple Writer [], called Apple Writer 2. > > My first printer was an old ASR-33 teletype, that only wrote in > uppercase. It was so loud, that we either left the room when > printing, or put the thing out in the hall to print. I put wheels on > it, to wheel it outside of the door! > > I was highly productive in those days. While many of my colleagues > were laborious writing out their papers and proposals in longhand, > Remember that art?--[grin]--I could write my papers on the Apple, edit > them, and print the rough draft on that old ASR-33! I could give a > ready draft to my secretary, so it could be typed into a final draft-- > ready to go. I was more productive than my peers. > > It was an exciting time. Advances came along all the time--and major > ones. There were a number of other Apple products that flopped, and > the Apple was the cash cow for Apple. The Lisa, the Apple 3, came and > went before Jobs got the Mac worked out. > > The difference between then and now was that leaps in computer tech > came as more revolutionary than evolutionary. The mouse arrived then, > and it changed the world. > > There was a portable Apple II called the IIc. The Apple II-E > followed the II plus, and was the one most people know. The IIgs came > in 1986--I still have mine. It has an old Slotbuster, which was made > by Randy Carlstrum, of RC Systems--the precursor to the LiteTalk and > DoubleTalk you know. > > I have 2 LiteTalks, and a DoubleTalk, too. I liked the Slotbuster, as > it ran well with AppleWorks, which I used to write my thesis in grad > school. By then, Macs were dominating the > scene, as the Apple II Forever died in 1988, while Jobs left to form > Next Computer. > > By then a younger Larry Schutchan wrote Proterm, and his first > software for the Apple II. He quickly moved off to the PC, and the > excellent work on ASAP.--No, he is still around--at A{PH, and is the > creator of things you know, like Bookport--now extinct, and the > Braille Plus, which many of you do know. > > AppleWorks was an amazing creation, in that it was one of the first > Suites of software. It had a third party developer--there were many > then working on Apple Products, called Beagle Brothers. Their > enhancements put AppleWorks at the top of what one might do then. > > Back before the IIgs, there were music cards--one of the more notable > was the ALF music card, which had an exciting sound for that time. > The IIgs supplanted ALF. > > I did use an early edition of Outspoken for the Mac--the OS then on > the Mac LC was 4.5, as I recall. It was upgradable to 7.5, and I > believe that is what is still on it. I found that old Outspoken very > difficult to use, and admit I chose the easier route of Word Perfect > 5.1 on a PC with ASAP. > > The old LC is still in a box, and last I knew, it still runs. I did > have my IIgs up this past year pulling off some old files of the 64mb > HD I added to it, when I added the zipchip of 8 mhz. It took PC's > until the 400 mhz processors to be as fast as an Apple II with my > zipchip. > > AppleWorks had a PC reincarnation in DOS days--called SuperWorks, it > was an analog of AppleWorks on a PC. It never worked as well with > speech. > > One has to wonder how the world would be different if the Waz had > pushed for the 32-bit 6502, and a IIgs that carried on the Apple II > tradition. The open architecture of that day helped to make it an > exciting era. It might make for a great SF novel of an alternate > reality. > > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---