> On May 24, 2024, at 10:40 AM, Sellam Abraham via cctalk 
> <cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> 
> ...
> But it doesn't meet the other criteria Dave laid out. Most people these
> days have never heard of the Micral, but even normies might've heard of the
> Altair 8800 because of the very notoriety it has today because of it's
> significance back then.

This is a familiar pattern in discovery and invention.  In many cases, X was 
first invented by A and then some time later by B.  Or "discovered" instead of 
"invented".  And often the reason A is not generally identified as the first to 
do X is that the way A did it didn't lead to something that was widely used.

For example:
Vikings were the first Europeans to discover America, but their voyages didn't 
start a major movement so Columbus usually gets the credit.

FM radio was invented by Hanso Idzerda, but his approach was a bit odd and the 
economic reasons for it disappeared some years later, so Edwin Armstrong gets 
the credit and Idzerda is pretty much forgotten.  In this case, the bias is so 
strong that attempts to revise Wikipedia to correct the history get rejected.  
:-(

        paul

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