Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, Then Ignored, the First Personal ComputerFor all those who think American business should not be run by the numbers, here is a book that tells how and why, with a four- to six-year head start, Xerox decided not to enter the field of personal computing. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 11
Page 228
... Liddle was skeptical before meeting Massaro for the first time . For years Liddle had tried to win approval from Dallas management ; for years Dallas had rejected him . " Xerox , " had gone the constant refrain from Bob Potter ...
... Liddle was skeptical before meeting Massaro for the first time . For years Liddle had tried to win approval from Dallas management ; for years Dallas had rejected him . " Xerox , " had gone the constant refrain from Bob Potter ...
Page 229
... Liddle's program had gained real business momentum for the very first time . Liddle himself had joined PARC's Systems Science Laboratory in 1972 and had worked for two and a half years on the ill - fated POLOS project before George Pake ...
... Liddle's program had gained real business momentum for the very first time . Liddle himself had joined PARC's Systems Science Laboratory in 1972 and had worked for two and a half years on the ill - fated POLOS project before George Pake ...
Page 236
... Liddle's engineers and technicians had designed and built the Star , they had received no such counsel . No one at Xerox had been interested . The same Xerox habits and prejudices that for years had re- jected ambitions like those of ...
... Liddle's engineers and technicians had designed and built the Star , they had received no such counsel . No one at Xerox had been interested . The same Xerox habits and prejudices that for years had re- jected ambitions like those of ...
Contents
The Creation of the Alto | 51 |
The Reaffirmation of the Copier | 179 |
The Harvest of Isolation | 225 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alan Kay Archie McCardell architecture of information ARPA asked Bill bit map Bob Taylor Boca build Butler Lampson called Chuck Thacker commercial communications company's competition Computer Science computer scientists computing system copier copies corporate cost customers Dallas dollars electronic Elkind Ellenby Ellenby's engineers equipment Ethernet executive Ford George Pake Ginn going Haloid hardware hired Hughes IBM's invented Jack Goldman Jim O'Neill Joe Wilson Kearns knew laser printer Liddle machines manufacturing Massaro McCardell's ment million office systems operating organization Pake's Palo Alto PARC PARC's percent personal computer personal distributed computing Peter McColough Potter printing processor profits Project Genie puter research center sales force says Scientific Data Systems screen SDS's sell Sparacino Star Starkweather strategy task technical Tesler things timesharing wanted word processing xerography Xerox