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Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

    Dr. Henry Edward Roberts passed away on April 1st after a long illness yesterday, April 1.

He invented the Altair 8800, a machine that kick started the PC revolution. Originally a designer of model rocket kits, his first "personal computer" was sold in kit form for $395 in 1975.

Bill Gates & Paul Allen noticed his invention on the cover of Poplar Electronics, and offered to write software for it. The rest is history...

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Oh, that PC! For one mad moment, Peter, I thought Political Correctness had died with him.
When I read elsewhere that the father of "computing" had (just) died, this did not compute. Because the father of computing is generally regarded as Dr Alan Turing who laid the groundwork for an electronic computer to crack codes at Bletchley Park during the war.

All the fathers of computing have stood on the shoulders of giants and Dr. Roberts was another.

Many of Apple's ideas came from Xerox PARC. Where would modern computing be without the micro processor or big hard drives? The micro processor would not have had its start without orders from the military (for missile guidance) – and that goes for the Internet as well: which began as ARPANET, designed better to co-ordinate a response after a Soviet first strike.

Even that mother' of computing, Bill Gates – who has contributed little on the technical side, having copied or stolen almost all his ideas from elsewhere – has made an enormous contribution to computing by developing a huge market and lowering the costs for the benefit of all.
Wot, no mention of poor Charlie Babbage?
What about poor George Boole ? He never gets credit. Think the title referred specifically to the Personal Computer though.

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