Homebrew Computer Club

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Gordon French, founder of the Homebrew Computer Club, photographed at the Living Computer Museum in 2013. He hosted the first meeting of the club in his garage, in March 1975.

The Homebrew Computer Club was an early computer hobbyist group in Menlo Park, California, which met from March 1975 to December 1986. The club played an influential role in the development of the microcomputer revolution and the rise of that aspect of the Silicon Valley information technology industrial complex.

Several high-profile hackers and computer entrepreneurs emerged from its ranks, including Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, the founders of Apple Computer. With its newsletter and monthly meetings promoting an open exchange of ideas, the club has been described as "the crucible for an entire industry" as it pertains to personal computing[1]

History

Invitation to first Homebrew Computer Club meeting, sent by Fred Moore to Steve Dompier.
Gordon French, Lee Felsenstein, and Harry Garland would frequent the Oasis following the formal meetings of the club.[2]

The Homebrew Computer Club was an informal group of electronic enthusiasts and technically minded hobbyists who gathered to trade parts, circuits, and information pertaining to DIY construction of personal computing devices.[3] It was started by Gordon French and Fred Moore who met at the Community Computer Center in Menlo Park. They both were interested in maintaining a regular, open forum for people to get together to work on making computers more accessible to everyone.[4]

The first meeting of the club was held on March 5, 1975 in French's garage in Menlo Park, San Mateo County, California, on the occasion of the arrival in the area of the first MITS Altair 8800 microcomputer, a unit sent for review by People's Computer Company.[5]Steve Wozniak credits that first meeting as the inspiration to design the Apple I.[6] The next few meetings were held at a large home in Atherton, California, which had been used as a preschool. Subsequent meetings were held at an auditorium at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), until 1978, when meetings moved to the Stanford Medical School.[7]

An anecdote from member Thomas "Todd" Fischer relates that after the more-or-less "formal" meetings the participants often reconvened for an informal, late night "swap meet" in the parking lot of the Safeway store down the road, as SLAC campus rules prohibited such activity on campus property. Others, at the suggestion of Roger Melen, convened at The Oasis,[8] a bar and grill they considered a pub located on El Camino Real in nearby Menlo Park, recalled years later by a member as "Homebrew's other staging area".[9] As Steven Levy wrote about the Oasis gatherings:

Piling into wooden booths with tables deeply etched with the initials of generations of Stanford students, Garland and Melen and Marsh and Felsenstein and Dompier and French and whoever else felt like showing up would get emboldened by the meeting's energy and pitchers of beer.[2]

The 1999 made-for-television movie Pirates of Silicon Valley (and the book on which it is based, Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer) describes the role the Homebrew Computer Club played in creating the first personal computers, although the movie took the liberty of placing the meeting in Berkeley and misrepresented the meeting process.[citation needed]

Many of the original members of the Homebrew Computer Club continue to meet (as of 2009), having formed the 6800 Club, named after the Motorola (now Freescale) 6800 microprocessor. Occasionally and variously renamed after the release of the 6800, 6809, and other microprocessors, the group continues to meet monthly in Cupertino, California.[citation needed]

Members

Club members John Draper ("Captain Crunch"), Lee Felsenstein, and Roger Melen.

Most of the members were hobbyists but had an electronic engineering or computer programming background.[10] They came to the meetings to talk about the Altair 8800, to review other technical topics, and to exchange schematics and programming tips.[11]

From the ranks of this club came the founders of many microcomputer companies, including Steve Wozniak (Apple Computer), Harry Garland and Roger Melen (Cromemco), Thomas "Todd" Fischer, IMSAI Division, Fischer-Freitas Company, George Morrow (Morrow Designs), Paul Terrell (Byte Shop), Adam Osborne (Osborne Computer), and Bob Marsh (Processor Technology). John Draper was also a member of the club, as was Jerry Lawson (creator of the first cartridge-based video game system, Fairchild Channel F).[12]Li-Chen Wang, developer of Palo Alto Tiny Basic and graphics software for the Cromemco Dazzler, was also a club member, and Lee Felsenstein was moderator of the club meetings.[13] Steve Inness was a primary designer of one of the early cell phone touch screens as well as a business partner with John Draper.[14][15]

Others went on to other pursuits, such as Dan Werthimer who is a researcher in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence.[16]

Newsletter

Club newsletter, September 1976

The Homebrew Computer Club's newsletter was one of the most influential forces in the formation of the culture of Silicon Valley. Created and edited by its members, it initiated the idea of the personal computer, and helped its members build the original kit computers, like the Altair. One such influential event was the publication of Bill Gates's "Open Letter to Hobbyists", which lambasted the early hackers of the time for violating the copyrights of commercial software programs.[17]

Paul Terrell, partner in Repco who was the exclusive sales rep company for MITS in Northern California, was a member of the Club and would provide information at the meetings about the progress of the Altair 8800 in the factory and provide copies of the MITS Newsletter to members.[citation needed] He later started Byte Shop, an affordable computer store in Mountain View, California, and bought the first 50 Apple I Computers from Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak after they did a demonstration of the Apple I at a meeting at SLAC.[18]

The first issue of the newsletter was published on March 15, 1975, and continued through several designs, ending after 21 issues in December 1977. The newsletter was published from a variety of addresses in the early days, but later submissions went to a P.O. box address in Mountain View, California.[19]

The second volume began on January 31, 1976 and included sections for A LETTER FROM MITS, CASSETTE UPDATE, TINY BASIC, MEETING FACILITIES, SOFTWARE, PROBLEMS, MEETING-1, and ALTAIR 680.

In popular culture

The club is depicted in the films Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999) and Jobs (2013), as well as in the PBS documentary series Triumph of the Nerds (1996). However the depiction of how the club worked was not entirely accurate.[example needed]

See also

  • Berkeley Macintosh User Group
  • Boston Computer Society
  • Chaos Computer Club, a large and influential German club
  • Computer History Museum
  • Dr. Dobb's Journal
  • Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution
  • Hobby Computer Club
  • Kilobaud Microcomputing
  • West Coast Computer Faire

References

  1. ^ McCracken, Harry (November 12, 2013). "For One Night Only, Silicon Valley's Homebrew Computer Club Reconvenes". TIME Magazine. Retrieved November 12, 2013. …the open exchange of ideas that went on at its biweekly meetings did as much as anything to jumpstart the entire personal-computing revolution. It was the crucible for an entire industry.
  2. ^ a b Levy, Steven (1984). Hackers (First ed.). Anchor press/Doubleday. p. 213. ISBN 0-385-19195-2. Piling into wooden booths with tables deeply etched with the initials of generations of Stanford students, Garland and Melen and Marsh and Felsenstein and Dompier and French and whoever else felt like showing up would get emboldened by the meeting's energy and pitchers of beer.
  3. ^ "Homebrew And How The Apple Came To Be". atariarchives.org.
  4. ^ John Markoff, What the Dormouse Said (ISBN 0-670-03382-0)
  5. ^ Ganapati, Priya (March 5, 2009). "March 5, 1975: A Whiff of Homebrew Excites the Valley". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
  6. ^ Wozniak, Steve (2006). iWoz. W.W. Norton & Company. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-393-33043-4. After my first meeting, I started designing the computer that would later be known as the Apple I. It was that inspiring.
  7. ^ Freiberger, Paul; Swaine, Michael. Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer.
  8. ^ Farivar, Cyrus (February 24, 2018). "Silicon Valley pub that helped birth PC industry to close because of high rent". Ars Technica. Conde Nast. Retrieved February 25, 2018.
  9. ^ Balin, Fred. "Homebrew's 26th Birthday Commemoration." Email dated March 20, 2001
  10. ^ Lawrence Gitman; Carl McDaniel (March 23, 2007). The Future of Business: The Essentials. Cengage Learning. pp. 139–. ISBN 0-324-54279-8.
  11. ^ Robert M. Collins (August 22, 2009). Transforming America: Politics and Culture During the Reagan Years. Columbia University Press. pp. 104–. ISBN 978-0-231-12401-0.
  12. ^ "Interview: Jerry Lawson, Black Video Game Pioneer". Vintage Computing and Gaming, February 24, 2009.
  13. ^ Lash, Bob. "Memoir of a Homebrew Computer Club Member". Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  14. ^ Rhoads, Chris (January 13, 2007). "The Twilight Years of Cap'n Crunch". Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on May 27, 2015. Alt URL
  15. ^ "Steve Inness – Davis". Local Wiki. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  16. ^ Benjamin, Marina (2003). Rocket Dreams: How the Space Age Shaped Our Vision of a World Beyond. Simon and Schuster. p. 156. ISBN 0743254171.
  17. ^ Oral History of Lee Felsenstein Archived December 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Interviewed by Kip Crosby. Computer History Museum 2008, CHM Reference number: X4653.2008
  18. ^ McCracken, Harry (August 23, 2007). "The Man Who Jump-Started Apple". PC World. Archived from the original on May 11, 2011. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
  19. ^ "Homebrew Computer Club Newsletters, 1975–1977". DigiBarn Computer Museum. Retrieved February 25, 2019.

By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 18:50:09
Source: Wikipedia.org