Who's Who - The Wizards and their Machines

  • Bob Albrecht
    Found of People's Computer Company who took visceral pleasure
    in exposing youngsters to computers.
  • Altair 8800
    The pioneering microcomputer that galvanized hardware hackers.
    Building this kit made you learn hacking. Then you tried to
    figure out what to DO with it.
  • Apple II ][
    Steve Wozniak's friendly, flaky, good-looking computer,
    wildly successful and the spark and soul of a thriving industry.
  • Atari 800
    This home computer gave great graphics to game hackers like John Harris,
    though the company that made it was loath to tell you how it worked.
  • Bob and Carolyn Box
    World-record-holding gold prospectors turned software stars,
    working for Sierra On-Line.
  • Doug Carlston
    Corporate lawyer who chucked it all to form the Broderbund
    software company.
  • Bob Davis
    Left job in liquor store to become best-selling author
    of Sierra On-Line computer game "Ulysses and the Golden Fleece."
    Success was his downfall.
  • Peter Deutsch
    Bad in sports, brilliant at math, Peter was still in short pants
    when he stubled on the TX-0 at MIT--and hacked it
    along with the masters.
  • Steve Dompier
    Homebrew member who first made the Altair sing,
    and later wrote the "Targe" game on the Sol
    which entranced Tom Snyder.
  • John Draper
    The notorious "Captain Crunch" who fearlessly explored
    the phone systems, got jailed, hacked microprocessors.
    Cigarettes made his violent.
  • Mark Duchaineau
    The young Dungeonmaster who copy-protected On-Lines disks
    at his whim.
  • Chris Esponosa
    Fourteen-year-old follower of Steve Wozniak
    and early Apple employee.
  • Lee Felsenstein
    Former "military editor" of Berkeley Barb,
    and hero of an imaginary science-fiction novel,
    he designed computers with "junkyard" approach
    and was central figure in Bay Area hardware
    hacking in the seventies.
  • Ed Fredkin
    Gentle founder of Information International,
    thought himself world's greates programmer
    until he met Stew Nelson. Father figure to hackers.
  • Gordon French
    Silver-haired hardware hacker whose garage held not cars
    but his homebrewed Chicken Hawk comptuer, then held the
    first Homebrew Computer Club meeting.
  • Richard Garriott
    Astronaut's son who, as Lord British,
    created Ultima world on computer disks.
  • Bill Gates
    Cocky wizard, Harvard dropout who wrote Altair BASIC,
    and complained when hackers copied it.
  • Bill Gosper
    Horwitz of computer keyboards, master math and LIFE hacker
    at MIT AI lab, guru of the Hacker Ethic and student of
    Chinese restaurant menus.
  • Richard Greenblatt
    Single-minded, unkempt, prolific, and canonical MIT hacker
    who went into night phase so often that he zorched
    his academic career. The hacker's hacker.
  • John Harris
    The young Atari 800 game hacker who became Sierra On-Line's
    star programmer, but yearned for female companionship.
  • IBM-PC
    IBM's entry into the personal computer market
    which amazingly included a bit of the Hacker Ethic,
    and took over. [H.E. as open architecture.]
  • IBM 704
    IBM was The Enemy, and this was its machine,
    the Hulking Giant computer in MIT's Building 26.
    Later modified into the IBM 709, then the IBM 7090.
    Batch-processed and intolerable.
  • Jerry Jewell
    Vietnam vet turned programmer who founded Sirius Software.
  • Steven Jobs
    Visionary, beaded, non-hacking youngster who took
    Wozniak's Apple II ][, made a lot of deals,
    and formed a company that would make a billion dollars.
  • Tom Knight
    At sixteen, an MIT hacker who would name the
    Incompatible Time-sharing System. Later a
    Greenblatt nemesis over the LISP machine schism.
  • Alan Kotok
    The chubby MIT student from Jersey who worked
    under the rail layout at TMRC, learned the phone system
    at Western Electric, and became a legendary TX-0 and PDP-1 hacker.
  • Effrem Lipkin
    Hacker-activist from New York who loved machines
    but hated their uses. Co-Founded Community Memory;
    friend of Felsenstein.
  • LISP Machine
    The ultimate hacker computer, invented mosly by Greenblatt
    and subject of a bitter dispute at MIT.
  • "Uncle" John McCarthy
    Absent-minded but brilliant MIT [later Stanford] professor
    who helped pioneer computer chess, artificial intelligence, LISP.
  • Bob Marsh
    Berkeley-ite and Homebrewer who shared garage with Felsenstein
    and founded Processor Technology, which made the Sol computer.
  • Roger Melen
    Homebrewer who co-founded Cromemco company to make
    circuit boards for Altair. His "Dazzler" played LIFE
    programs on his kitchen table.
  • Louis Merton
    Pseudonym for the AI chess hacker whose tendency
    to go catatonic brought the hacker community together.
  • Jude Milhon
    Met Lee Felsenstein through a classified ad in the
    Berkeley Barb, and became more than a friend--
    a member of the Community Memory collective.
  • Marvin Minsky
    Playful and brilliant MIT prof who headed the AI lave
    and allowed the hackers to run free.
  • Fred Moore
    Vagabond pacifist who hated money, loved technology,
    and co-founded Homebrew Club.
  • Stewart Nelson
    Buck-toothed, diminutive, but fiery AI lab hacker
    who connected the PDP-1 comptuer to hack the phone system.
    Later co-founded the Systems Concepts company.
  • Ted Nelson
    Self-described "innovator" and noted curmudgeon
    who self-published the influential Computer Lib book.
  • Russel Noftsker
    Harried administrator of MIT AI lab in the late sixties;
    later president of Symbolics company.
  • Adam Osborne
    Bangkok-born publisher-turned-computer-manufacturer
    who considered himself a philsopher. Founded Osborne
    Computer Company to make "adequate" machines.
  • PDP-1
    Digital Equipment's first minicomputer, and in 1961
    an interactive godsend to the MIT hackers and a
    slap in the face to IBM fascism.
  • PDP-6
    Designed in part by Kotok, this mainframe computer
    was cornerstone of AI lab, with its gorgeious instruction set
    and sixteen sexy registers.
  • Tom Pittman
    The religious Homebrew hacker who lost his wife
    but kept the faith with his Tiny Basic.
  • Ed Roberts
    Enigmatic founder of MITS company who shook the world
    with his Altair computer. He wanted to help people
    build mental pyramids.
  • Steve [Slug] Russell
    McCarthy's "coolie," who hacked the Spacewar program,
    first videogame, on the PDP-1. Never made a dime from it.
  • Peter Samson
    MIT hacker, one of the first, who loved systems, trains,
    TX-0, music, parliamentary procedure, pranks, and hacking.
  • Bob Saunders
    Jolly, balding TMRC hacker who married early,
    hacked till late at night eating "lemon gunkies,"
    and mastered the "CBS Strategy on Spacewar.
  • Warren Schwader
    Big blond hacker from rural Wisconsin who went from
    the assembly line to software stardom but couldn't
    reconcile the shift with his devotion to Jehovah's Witnesses.
  • David Silver
    Left school at fourteen to be mascot of AI lab;
    maker of illicit keys and builder of a tiny robot
    that did the impossible.
  • Dan Sokol
    Long-haired prankster who reveled in revealing technological
    secrets at Homebrew Club. Helped "liberate" Alair BASIC
    on paper tape.
  • Les Solomon
    Editor of Popular Electroics, the puller of strings
    who set the computer revolution into motion.
  • Marty Spergel
    The Junk Man, the Homebrew member who supplied circuits
    and cables and could make you a deal for anything.
  • Richard Stallman
    The Last of the Hackers, who vowed to defend
    the principles of Hackerism to the bitter end.
    Remained at MIT until there was no one to eat
    Chinese food with.
  • Jeff Stephenson
    Thirty-year-old martial arts veteran and hacker
    who was astounded that joining Sierra On-Line
    meant enrolling in Summer Camp.
  • Jay Sullivan
    MAddeningly clam wizard-level programmer at Informatics who
    impressed Ken Williams by knowing the meaning of the word "any."
  • Dick Sunderland
    Chalk-complexioned MBA who believed that firm managerial
    bureaucracy was a worth goal, but as president of Sierra On-Line
    found that hackers didn't think that way.
  • Gerry Sussman
    Young MIT hacker branded "loser" because he smoked a pipe
    and "munged" his programs; later became "winner" by algorithmic magic.
  • Margot Tommervik
    With her husband Al, long-haired Margot parlayed her
    game show winnings into a magazine that deified the Apple Computer.
  • Tom Swift Terminal
    Lee Felsenstein's legendary, never-to-be-built computer terminal
    which would give the user ultimate leave to get his hands on the world.
  • TX-0
    Filled a small room, but in the late fifties this $3 million machine
    was the world's first personal computer--for the community of
    MIT hackers that formed around it.
  • Jim Warren
    Portly purveyor of "techno-gossip" at Homebrew,
    he was first editor of hippie-styled Dr. Dobbs Journal,
    later started the lucrative Computer Faire.
  • Randy Wigginton
    Fifteen-year-old member of Steve Wozniak's kiddie corps,
    he help Woz trundle the Apple II to Homebrew.
    Still in high school when he became Apple's first software employee.
  • Ken Williams
    Arrogant and brilliant young programmer who saw the writing on the CRT
    and started Sierra On-Line to make a killing and improve society
    by selling games for the Apple computer.
  • Roberta Williams
    Ken Williams' timid wife who rediscovered her own creativity
    by writing "Mystery House," the first of her many bestselling
    computer games.
  • Steven "Woz" Wozniak
    Openhearted, technologically daring hardware hacker
    from San Jose suburbs. Woz built the Apple Computer
    for the pleasure of himself and friends.

Fineprint : Taken from the Project Gutenberg E-Text : Hackers, Heroes of the Computer Revolution, by Steven Levy

Entry by 86.101.110.117 on 25.11.08 on 25.11.08 | no comments | | | Filed under ,

Lorem Ipsum

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit, sed diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat. Ut wisi enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exerci tation ullamcorper suscipit lobortis nisl ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis autem vel eum iriure dolor in hendrerit in vulputate velit esse molestie consequat, vel illum dolore eu feugiat nulla facilisis at vero eros et accumsan et iusto odio dignissim qui blandit praesent luptatum zzril delenit augue duis dolore te feugait nulla facilisi. Nam liber tempor cum soluta nobis eleifend option congue nihil imperdiet doming id quod mazim placerat facer possim assum. Typi non habent claritatem insitam; est usus legentis in iis qui facit eorum claritatem. Investigationes demonstraverunt lectores legere me lius quod ii legunt saepius. Claritas est etiam processus dynamicus, qui sequitur mutationem consuetudium lectorum. Mirum est notare quam littera gothica, quam nunc putamus parum claram, anteposuerit litterarum formas humanitatis per seacula quarta decima et quinta decima. Eodem modo typi, qui nunc nobis videntur parum clari, fiant sollemnes in futurum.

Entry by 86.101.110.117 on 15.11.08 on 15.11.08 | no comments | |

Get the files from here.

For those of you who cant get a hold of the entire build. You can get the files from here.

I have not uploaded the files here, and therefore i can not guarantee them to be malware free.

Entry by 86.101.110.117 on 10.11.08 on 10.11.08 | no comments | |

Get Windows Calculator Build 6780 in Vista or Server 2008

On October 28, 2008, Microsoft distributed the build 6801 of the upcoming Windows 7 to the attendees at its Professional Developers Conference (PDC).

i managed to get a hold of it. And here is one of my most liked feature. The improved windows calendar.

Since i am a assembly level programmer. i always wanted a quick convert from decimal and hexadecimal to binary.

This is so easy with the new Programmers Mode.

Take a look below.

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The standard mode also has a new look. see below

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The standard mode has a new history feature.

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The new look of the scientific mode is below.

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And here is a statistics mode.

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There is also a date conversion and a unit conversion module. See below.

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And here is the hack, getting this to work in Vista and Server 2008.

All i had to do was copy these two files from the 6780 build to my 6001 build.

  • C:\Windows\System32\calc.exe
  • C:\Windows\System32\en-US\calc.exe.mui

And i had it working.

If you dont want to loose your old calc.exe, but want the new one also, just leave the old files as it is, and paste these new files in the above locations as calc7.exe and calc7.exe.mui.

And you will have the new calc if you type calc 7 in the run prompt.

Entry by 86.101.110.117 on 10.11.08 | no comments | | | Filed under

Why You Need To Demand DRM Free Music

image

Found this interesting among the rest.

Taken from XKCD, http://xkcd.com

Entry by 86.101.110.117 on 1.11.08 on 1.11.08 | no comments | | | Filed under