Creative Computing Vol. 10 No. 11 - November 1984
- The early days of personal computers. by Stephen B. Gray
- The Altair story; early days at MITS. by Forrest M. Mims III
- The first decade of personal computing. by David H. Ahl
- Prediction and predilection: Creative Computing and the future of the micro industry. by John J. Anderson
- Dave tells Ahl - the history of Creative Computing. by John J. Anderson
- Creative Computing in pictures. by Betsy Staples
- Ascent of the personal computer. by David H. Ahl
- From number crunching to creativity. by Steve Hunka
- The computer as a creative tool. by Crhis Rutkowski
- Counterculture to Madison Avenue. by Chuck Peddle
- A guided tour of personal computing. by Paul Terrell
- Ten years and counting. by Harry Garland
- 1975: ancient history. by Robert Marsh
- As we were. by Diane Asher Leyland
- Adventures in personal computing. by Scott Adams
- Flying high. by David Lien
- A trend toward softness. by Bill Gates
- Visicalc'79. by Daniel S. Bricklin; Bob Frankston
- Zaron and the art of motorcycle maintenance.
- Confessions of a naked programmer. by Michael Shrayer
- What the computer industry means to me. by David Gordon
- The computer store saga. by Stan Veit
- You want to open a what? by David Fox; Annie Fox
- They don't make computer mags like they used to. by Tom Dwyer
- Two years behind the masthead. by David Lubar
- The role of magazines in personal computing. by David Bunnell
- The grass is always greener. by Wayne Green
- Ah, progress. by Carl Helmers
- Computers, children, and learning: one complete iteration. by Walter Koetke
- Reflections on educational computing. by Kenneth Brumbaugh
- Personal computers invade the classroom. by John Kemeny
- Computing history: a personal and industry view. by C. Gordon Bell
- Computer futures for education. by Alfred Bork
- To improve education. by David Moursund
- Computers and human evolution. by Michael Crichton
- Growing up. by Adam Osborne
- How we trapped the dinosaurs. by Lee Felsenstein
- What makes a computer personal? by P.D. Estridge
- The great personal computer con. by Tim Hartnell
- Bringing management skills to micros. by William Godbout
- Where we've been; where we're going. by David Tebbutt
- What ever happened to performance? by Will Fastie
- Who's in control? by Peter Rodwell
- Of mice, windows, icons, and men. by Harvard Pennington
- The great unfulfilled promise. by Rodnay Zaks
- Basic is back. by Thomas Kurtz
- Misconceptions about Logo. by Seymour Papert
- Stand-up computer programming. by Bill Budge
- Giving the artists their due. by Jim Levy
- Piracy and software protection. by Mitchell Kapor
- Computers, the myth, the promise, the reason. by Ken Williams
- Of passion and pet projects. by Peter McWilliams
- Thinking about thinking machines. by Tom Stonier
- Predictions on our computerized future. by Clive Sinclair
- Personal computers in 1990. by Egil Juliussen
- The history and the hope. by Ken Uston
- A computerized cashless society. by George Morrow
- The intelligent gamer. by David Levy
- The making of a computer artist. by Saul Bernstein
- Computer technology: greater impact on America since the industrial revolution. by Stan Goldberg
- Apple Computer: an interview with Steve Wozniak. by Danny Goodman
- Tandy Radio Shack enters the magic world of computers. by David H. Ahl
- IBM: colossus of Armonk. by Corey Sandler
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