[comp.lang.smalltalk] _Fumbling_the_Future_

ittai@shemesh.GBA.NYU.EDU (Ittai Hershman) (12/15/89)

Yes, it is a "must read".  Unfortunately, it's not terribly well
written, or more precisely, it is not well edited.  This seemed ironic
to me at the time I read it -- just as Xerox fumbled, this book
fumbled in telling the story.  It is a great story which the authors
did a good job of researching.  Had a little more work gone into it,
this book would have had a far greater impact.

	Fumbling The Future: how Xerox invented, then ignored,
	the first personal computer / Douglas K. Smith and Robert
	C. Alexander.  Morrow, 1988.  ISBN 0-688-06959-2.  $19.95.

I would also recommend:

	The History of Personal Workstations / Edited by Adele Goldberg.
	Addison Wesley/ACM Press, 1988.  ISBN 0-201-11259-0.  $46.50 for
	ACM members via the ACM.

-Ittai

ck@voa3.UUCP (Chris Kern) (12/16/89)

For an excellent exposition of what Xerox got right in the Star and
subsequent products, see "The Xerox Star: A Retrospective" in the
Sept., 1989, issue of the IEEE journal, "Computer."

-- 
Chris Kern			     Voice of America, Washington, D.C.
...uunet!voa3!ck					+1 202-485-7020