I remember the  fort  articles I wrote  for the HP  chronicle  newspaper I 
did  with  editor 3000... it  was  handy as  where ever i was   I could log 
on and  work on  it.
 
 
In a message dated 9/10/2017 6:04:53 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,  
cctalk@classiccmp.org writes:

>>  Virtually ALL "FIRST"s in history had obscure predecessors.
>> Hence  the word "FIRST" should be avoided by any real historians with  
integrity.

On Sun, 10 Sep 2017, Guy Sotomayor Jr wrote:
> I think  it all depends upon how you define “word processing”.  For 
> me I  absolutely detest things like MS Word.  Probably because I started  
> with markup languages.

Well, in THIS case, the claim was "the  first author to write a novel on a 
computer".
There are a LOT of items  subject to dispute.  Does "write a novel on a 
computer" include  manuscripts that were never submitted to publisher?
manuscripts rejected by  publisher?
manuscripts that never made it to print?
Manuscripts that  were printed, but had inadequate sales?
Published novels that weren't best  sellers?
include composing on computer, but then retyped by  secretary?
include composing offline, but typed on a computer by  secretary?
Is a dedicated word processor machine a computer?
Is a  terminal on a timesharing system "on a computer"?

So, I'm settling for  pointing out that "FIRST" usually ignores obscure, 
little known,  unsuccessful, predecessors.

Jerry did some great things to popularize  microcomputers, and bring them 
to the masses.
He was an EARLY user  (Electric Pencil), but certainly not "THE FIRST".

He wrote an  entertaining column.  It sometimes pissed us off.
He was loud and  opinionated.
He had easy access to all the latest stuff that we wanted -  one time, 
another columnist ridiculed him by talking about Seymour Cray  personally 
installing and troubleshooting a machine given to  Jerry.

We will miss him.


PS: I started with an editor on a  timeahring system, and then when 
microcomputers came out, used Electric  Pencil, then SCRIPSIT (My Honda 
book) and Wordstar.  But once I  settled in, I liked to use PC-Write for 
text editing (Bob Wallace and I  were buddies in high school), and used 
Xerox Ventura for formatting.   (XenoSoft manuals, etc.)
Now I use Word and Open Office Writer.
I did my  PhD written exams on Windows Write, and was the first person in 
the School  of Library and Information Studies to do them on a  computer.
("FIRST"!!)  I responded to faculty objections with, "Are  you going to 
grade me on my penmanship?"  Windows Write, being  included in the OS, 
seemed to answer some of the concerns about how to  "sanitize" a computer 
to avoid smuggling in pre-written  content.

--
Grumpy Ol' Fred            ci...@xenosoft.com


> The first one was one that I wrote  for the IBM 1130 so I could do a high 
school research paper (1974).  It  was written in
> Fortran (sorry long gone) and the “paper” was all on  punch cards and 
printed on a 1403 printer.  I did it mainly  because
> it was a pain to keep track of how to format for footnotes and  
attributions.
>
> At CMU I used Scribe that output to the XGP  (Xerox Graphics Printer 
driven by a PDP-11/45).  This was the first time  I
> used something where there were selectable fonts (1976).  At  IBM 
*everything* was done with various versions of SCRIPT.
> At this  point I can’t recall but I believe a number of the IBM manuals 
were all done  in SCRIPT.
>
> I then used Interleaf (a *high* end document  publishing/management 
system) and then FrameMaker (before Adobe
>  completely screwed it up and finally killed it).
>
> I currently  use LaTex for producing anything more complicated than an  
email.
>
> TTFN - Guy

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