Or to Computer Literacy bookstore. Each time I attended a conference in the Bay Area I made sure to drop into their store in San Jose to spend hours poring over the multitude of recent books on all the new stiuff happening in computing. I then had to lug 3-5 heavy books back on the plane with me. Then CL opened a store near me (Tyson's Corner in northern Virginia) which I visited at least weekly. I musta spent thousands on books back then, especially from O'Reilly. The world of computing was exploding and just keeping up with it was a challenge but also a major blast.
No source on the changes afoot then in computing was more compelling than WiReD Magazine. Its first 3-5 years were simply riveting: great insightful imaginative stories and fascinating interviews with folks whose font of creative ideas seemed unstoppable and sure to change the world. Each month's issue sucked all my time until it was read cover to cover and then discussed with others ASAP. That was a great time to be young and alive.
But Wired wasn't alone. Before them, Creative Computing and Byte were also must reads. Between 1975 and maybe 1990, the computing hobbyist community was red hot with hacks of all kinds, hard and soft. No way I was going to take a job that was NOT in computing. So I did. Been there ever since.
No source on the changes afoot then in computing was more compelling than WiReD Magazine. Its first 3-5 years were simply riveting: great insightful imaginative stories and fascinating interviews with folks whose font of creative ideas seemed unstoppable and sure to change the world. Each month's issue sucked all my time until it was read cover to cover and then discussed with others ASAP. That was a great time to be young and alive.
But Wired wasn't alone. Before them, Creative Computing and Byte were also must reads. Between 1975 and maybe 1990, the computing hobbyist community was red hot with hacks of all kinds, hard and soft. No way I was going to take a job that was NOT in computing. So I did. Been there ever since.