Byte magazine



         


BYTE magazine was probably the most influentual microcomputer magazine in the late 1970s and the 1980s because of its wide-ranging editorial coverage. Whereas many magazines are dedicated to PCs, or Windows, or the Macintosh, BYTE covered developments in the entire field of "small computers and software."

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Inception and early years

BYTE started in 1975, shortly after the first personal computers appeared as kits in the back of electronics magazines. BYTE was published monthly, with a yearly subscription price of $10. Carl Helmers was the founding editor and Virginia Green (nee Londner)was the founding publisher. Wayne Green, publisher of a ham radio magazine, injected a bit of controversy around the founding of BYTE. Wayne Green had been convicted of 12 counts of fraud and perjury in federal court. While his prison sentence was suspended, he had a large fine to pay. He apparently eyed BYTE as a source of funds and began claiming it as his. Lawsuits filed regarding Green's statements on the matter were settled with Green paying substantial sums for his allegedly libelous statements about BYTE's birth and his former wife's ownership of the property. Virginia had divorced Green about 10 years before she and Helmers started BYTE. This fact didn't prevent Green from claiming, among other claims, that he lost BYTE in a divorce.

BYTE was able to attract advertising and articles from many well-knowns, soon-to-be-well-knowns, and ultimately-to-be-forgottens in the growing microcomputer hobby. Articles in the first issue (September, 1975) included "Which Microprocessor For You?" by Hal Chamberlin, "Write Your Own Assembler" by Dan Flystra and "Serial Interface" by . MITS, Godbout, SCELBI, Processor Technology and Sphere were among the advertisers in that issue.

Early articles in BYTE were do-it-yourself electronic or software projects to improve one's computer. A continuing feature was "Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar," a column in which an electronic engineer, Steve Ciarcia, described small projects to attach to one's computer (later spun off to become the magazine , focusing on embedded computer applications). Significant articles in this period included insertion of disk drives into S-100 computers, publication of source code for various computer languages (Tiny C, BASIC, assemblers), and breathless coverage of the first microcomputer operating system, CP/M. BYTE ran Microsoft's first advertisement, as "Micro-Soft," to sell a BASIC interpreter for 8080-based computers.

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Growth and change

In spring of 1979, owner/publisher Virginia Williamson sold the magazine to McGraw-Hill. She remained publisher through 1983 (a total of about 8 years from inception) and subsequently became a vice president of McGraw-Hill Publications Company. Shortly after the IBM PC was introduced, in 1981, the magazine changed editorial policies. It gradually deemphasized the do-it-yourself electronics and software articles, and began running product reviews, the first computer magazine to do so. It continued its wide-ranging coverage of hardware and software, but now it reported "what it does" and "how it works," not "how-to-do-it." The editorial focus remained on any computer system or software that might be within a typical individual's finances and interest (centered on home and personal computers).

From 1975 through 1986, BYTE covers frequently featured the artwork of Robert Tinney. Elegant and stylish, surrealistic and good-humored, these covers made BYTE visually unique. The color scheme was often a dull green that evoked the color of a printed circuit board. In 1987, the replacement of Tinney paintings with product photographs (together with the discontinuation of Jerry Pournelle's weblog "" derived from a long-standing column in BYTE, describing computers from a power-user's point of view. Pournelle's writing is clear, intelligent, colorful, opinionated, and idiosyncratic; he amuses or offends many people. In 1999, CMP revived BYTE as a web-publication. In 2002, the site became subscription-supported. The wide-ranging editorial policy continues. The site now has numerous articles on open-source projects, including a continuing column on Linux. Jerry Pournelle was retained to continue writing "The View From Chaos Manor", which from December 2003 again appears in print in English, in the programming magazine Dr. Dobb's Journal.

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