steem

Monday, November 8, 2021

BYTE (January 1984)

BYTE (January 1984)

BYTE was a computer magazine published from 1975 until 1998, appearing not long after the first commercial computer kits started being advertised. It covered a vast array of computers over the years and included technical content as well as hardware and software reviews. The January 1984 issue was a massive 560+ pages and included:

Columns

  • Build the Circuit Cellar Term-Mite ST Smart Terminal, Part 1: Hardware - Thanks to advancing technology, you can construct an intelligent video terminal with just 21 integrated circuits.

  • BYTE West Coast: Beyond the Word Processor - Tomorrow's text editors may facilitate text composition from the earliest conceptual stages to the analysis of finished documents.

  • User's Column: too Many Leads, or What in *;?!#"*? Goes First? - Jerry covers a lot of territory this month, beginning his journey of a thousand words with a trip to the Circuit Cellar.

Themes

  • 1984 and Beyond - The year calls up inevitable associations with George Orwell's novel of a futuristic, technologically oppressed society and raises questions concerning the present and future significance of technology to our own culture.

  • Reason and the Software Bus - The Reason research project, exploring artificial intelligence, has developed a software bus that may have a significant effect on future software. As a hardware bus uses ICs, so the software bus manipulates various program components to provide integration, networking, and multitasking.

  • A General-Purpose Robot-Control Language - By bridging the communication gap between people and robots, a plain-language system called Savvy increases the usefulness of these mechanical assistants.

  • 1984, the Year of the 32-bit Microprocessor - As manufacturers rush to introduce their 32-bit designs, it's time to take a look at what these microprocessors are and what they're good for.

  • Memory Cards: A New Concept in Personal Computing - Picture a microcomputer without a keyboard, without a power supply, and small enough to fit in your wallet. That's just one possible application of memory-card technology.

  • Computer-aided Design - CAD capabilities on desktop systems can simplify a variety of tasks, from flowcharting to product design, but the choices in hardware and software can be baffling.

  • Speech Recognition: An Idea Whose Time Is Coming - While the multidisciplinary nature of the technology may slow its advance, speech recognition is well on its way to becoming a major factor in our interactions with machines.

  • Using Natural-Language Systems on Personal Computers - Artificial intelligence offers possible solutions to the problems of communication between people and computers.

  • Portables - 1984 and Beyond: Idea-Processing Software and Portable Computers - When your personal computer leaps off your desktop and into your briefcase, what type of software will accompany it?

  • Beyond the Application Program: A Different Approach to Integrated Software - Element managers that implement objects such as spreadsheet tables and paragraphs may supplant the traditional concept of the application program.

Reviews

  • Reviewer's Notebook - This month's notes touch on Seequa Computer Corporation's Chameleon Plus and new trends in the printer market.

  • The Zenith Z-100 - Supporting both 8-bit and 16-bit software, the Z-100 also offers impressive color graphics.

  • Pinball Construction Set - Tired o fthe same old pinball games? Try creating your own with this software-design package.

  • The TRS-80 Model 16B with Xenix - Once of the most significant features of Radio Shack's new computer is its Unix-derived operating system.

  • Naturallink to Down Jones News/Retrieval - A new software package from Texas Instruments simplifies access to a financial database.

  • The Vamp DVM-1 Computer/TV Interface Kit - The picture quality of your display can suffer when you use a radio-frequency modulator to interface your computer's video output to a standard color television, but a kit from Vamp offers an alternative.

  • The Einstein Compiler - In addition to speeding up Applesoft BASIC programs, the Einstein compiler provides statistical information on the programs compiled and can function as a debugging tool

  • The Basis 108 - Apple compatibility is just one of this German import's interesting features.

Features

  • Bubbles on the S-100 Bus, Part 1: The Hardware - Using Intel's BPK 72 Bubble-Memory Prototype Kit, you can put together a 128K-byte bubble-memory board for an S-100 bus system.

  • Mockingbird: A Composer's Amanuensis - The chief purpose of this music notation editor from Xerox is to help composers capture their ideas by speeding up the notation process.

  • The VU68K Single-Board Computer - You can construct a 68000-based system for under $200.

  • Translating the SAS Language Into BASIC - A preprocessor program that translates SAS-like statements into equivalent BASIC statements permits SAS-like programs to run on a microcomputer.

  • A Software Review Method That Really Works - The group walk-through, a process of "playing computer," provides a workable means of correcting programming problems.

  • Real-Time Clocks and PC-DOS - A device-driver program for the clock chip on a typical multifunction board takes advantage of special provisions in the IBM PC operating system.

Nucleus

  • Editorial: Revisiting the Luddites
  • MICROBYTES
  • Letters
  • BYTE's User to User
  • Ask BYTE
  • Software Received
  • Event Queue
  • Books Received
  • Clubs and Newsletters
  • What's New?
  • Unclassified Ads
  • BYTE's Ongoing Monitor Box, BOMB Results
  • Reader Service

...and more!

No comments:

Post a Comment