Ed Davis Posted February 28, 2011 Share Posted February 28, 2011 These are so cool! Thanks for the uploads! If you take requests, I'd like to see: Vol 03 No 9 37 Sep-78 Vol 03 No 10 38 Oct-78 Vol 03 No 11 39 Nov-78 These issues feature the "Tiny Pascal" compiler. In any case, thanks for sharing these! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 4, 2011 Author Share Posted March 4, 2011 Hi people.. Sorry for the delay last week.. There will be two this week (next two days) and it looks like two per week for the next six weeks.. One of the two I chopped up today had a Tiny Pascal article in it (I think part one)... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 5, 2011 Author Share Posted March 5, 2011 BYTE Vol 03-09 1978-09 Graphic Manipulations - 212 Pages 130,384,572 bytes BYTE Vol 03-09 from September 1978... Oh this issue is worth it just for the coverage of the NCC 2978 Computer show.. Great photos of graphics with UCSD pascal, Exidy's generating color graphics, Compucolor 3, a micro mouse running a maze, RCA Cosmac graphics expansion, and a voice controlled music synthesizer. Several articles on the math behind computer graphics... Clearly they did not learn the way student today do - just drag the circle icon into your code window the click on the parameters.. sheesh! Not so hard! Foreground A " TINY" PASCAL COMPILER , Part 1: The P-Code Interpreter LET YOUR FING ERS DO THE TALKING : Scanner Applications S2L : AN ALTAIR (S-100) TO LSI-ll BUS ADAPTER WADUZITDO: How To Write a Language Background THE MATHEMATICS OF COMPUTER GRAPHICS APL AND GRAPHICS SOME WORDS ABOUT PROGRAM STRUCTURE ANTIQUE MECHANICAL COMPUTERS: The Torres Chess Automaton MATH IN THE REAL WORLD GRAPHIC MANIPULATIONS USING MATRICES Nucleus In This BYTE On Entering Our Fourth Year The NCC '78 Personal Computer Show Letters BYTE's Bits BYTE's Bugs Event Queue Programming Quickies: Plugging the KIM-2 Gap Clubs and Newsletters Directory Book Reviews Technical Forum: Making an H9 Understand Lower Case What's New? Unclassified Ads BOMB Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 03-09 1978-09 Graphic Manipulations Cover Index Note: Unfortunately the original owner of this magazine tore out a page (121/122) and a section of another (pages 53/54). If someone has this issue laying around and can scan the two (well four... 2 sides) I can update this mag and make it complete. Thanks. Fixed! 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DanBoris Posted March 6, 2011 Share Posted March 6, 2011 BYTE Vol 03-09 1979-09 Graphic Manipulations - 210 Pages 128,984,362 bytes Note: Unfortunately the original owner of this magazine tore out a page (121/122) and a section of another (pages 53/54). If someone has this issue laying around and can scan the two (well four... 2 sides) I can update this mag and make it complete. Thanks. I have this issue. I'll PM you where you can get the scans. Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
potatohead Posted March 6, 2011 Share Posted March 6, 2011 The manipulations with matrices is a great article! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 6, 2011 Author Share Posted March 6, 2011 BYTE Vol 03-09 1979-09 Graphic Manipulations - 210 Pages 128,984,362 bytes Note: Unfortunately the original owner of this magazine tore out a page (121/122) and a section of another (pages 53/54). If someone has this issue laying around and can scan the two (well four... 2 sides) I can update this mag and make it complete. Thanks. I have this issue. I'll PM you where you can get the scans. Dan Thank you much sir! The magazine is all fixed and looking good now The link had been changed to point to the updated magazine.. I also had the name wrong on the filename (1979 instead of 1978) so if anyone is saving these to a directory make sure to delete the previous one. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 6, 2011 Author Share Posted March 6, 2011 BYTE Vol 04-01 1979-01 Life Algorithms - 228 Pages 151,407,526 bytes BYTE Vol 04-01 from January 1979... Huge Huge article on the 6809 processor design philosophy... Though I love reading on computer history so my favorite article was the one on the IBM 704. The BNF article was awesome... and a wire Wrapping kit makes the "whats new?" on page 214 heh Foreground BUILD A COMPUTER CONTROLLED SECURITY SYSTEM FOR YOUR HOME, A COMPUTERIZED MAILING LIST LIFE ALGORITHMS POLYPHONY MADE EASY AN AUDIBLE LOGIC TEST PROBE HISTORY OF COMPUTERS: The IBM 704 Background A MICROPROCESSOR FOR THE REVOLUTION: THE 6809 AN EXPOSURE TO MUMPS THE DIGICAST SYSTEM GRANDMASTER WALTER BROWNE VERSUS CHESS 4.6 AN INTRODUCTION TO BNF CREATING A CHESS PLAYER, Part 4: Strategy in Computer Chess IPS, AN UNORTHODOX HIGH LEVEL LANGUAGE GOTOlocks AND THE THREE SORTS ELEMENTS OF STATISTICAL COMPUTATION Nucleus In This BYTE A Short Note on Pascal Progress and Other Topics Letters Book Reviews BYTE's Bugs Technical Forum: Comments on S-100 Bus Extension Clubs and Newsletters Directory BYTE's Bits Desk Top Wonder: Some Random Games Nybbles : A Micro Word Processor Programming Quickies: Single Stepping the 8080 Processor Event Queue What's New? Unclassified Ads BOMB, Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 04-01 1979-01 Life Algorithms Cover Index 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
high voltage Posted March 7, 2011 Share Posted March 7, 2011 (edited) BYTE Vol 03-09 1978-09 Graphic Manipulations - 212 Pages 130,384,572 bytes BYTE Vol 03-09 from September 1978... Oh this issue is worth it just for the coverage of the NCC 2978 Computer show.. Great photos of graphics with UCSD pascal, Exidy's generating color graphics, Compucolor 3, a micro mouse running a maze, RCA Cosmac graphics expansion, and a voice controlled music synthesizer. Several articles on the math behind computer graphics... Clearly they did not learn the way student today do - just drag the circle icon into your code window the click on the parameters.. sheesh! Not so hard! Foreground A " TINY" PASCAL COMPILER , Part 1: The P-Code Interpreter LET YOUR FING ERS DO THE TALKING : Scanner Applications S2L : AN ALTAIR (S-100) TO LSI-ll BUS ADAPTER WADUZITDO: How To Write a Language Background THE MATHEMATICS OF COMPUTER GRAPHICS APL AND GRAPHICS SOME WORDS ABOUT PROGRAM STRUCTURE ANTIQUE MECHANICAL COMPUTERS: The Torres Chess Automaton MATH IN THE REAL WORLD GRAPHIC MANIPULATIONS USING MATRICES Nucleus In This BYTE On Entering Our Fourth Year The NCC '78 Personal Computer Show Letters BYTE's Bits BYTE's Bugs Event Queue Programming Quickies: Plugging the KIM-2 Gap Clubs and Newsletters Directory Book Reviews Technical Forum: Making an H9 Understand Lower Case What's New? Unclassified Ads BOMB Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 03-09 1978-09 Graphic Manipulations Cover Index Note: Unfortunately the original owner of this magazine tore out a page (121/122) and a section of another (pages 53/54). If someone has this issue laying around and can scan the two (well four... 2 sides) I can update this mag and make it complete. Thanks. Fixed! Just reading this issue, basically is was not Activision being the world's first independent developer and distributor of video games, but Scelbi: Edited March 7, 2011 by high voltage Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Loguidice Posted March 7, 2011 Share Posted March 7, 2011 Just reading this issue, basically is was not Activision being the world's first independent developer and distributor of video games, but Scelbi: Activision was the first on consoles. No one ever said on computers. Naturally there were several on computers prior to Activision, including famous ones like Adventure International. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mariush Posted March 7, 2011 Share Posted March 7, 2011 (edited) ThumpNugget, I don't see much usage on the ftp mirror I offered... got maybe 10-15 users downloading the set. If you think it will help, you may make the link clickable - maybe people are too lazy to edit the url and abuse the other mirrors. Maybe you should also mention on each new pdf's post the mirrors as I doubt people that just come from search engines would go to the first post to find about mirrors. Edited March 7, 2011 by mariush Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
exobuzz Posted March 7, 2011 Share Posted March 7, 2011 ThumpNugget, I don't see much usage on the ftp mirror I offered... got maybe 10-15 users downloading the set. If you think it will help, you may make the link clickable - maybe people are too lazy to edit the url and abuse the other mirrors. I can add your mirror to the first link (that chooses a weighted random one) if you like. Right now it is split 70/10/10/10 between mine and the three others Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mariush Posted March 7, 2011 Share Posted March 7, 2011 Sure, no problem. I'm glad to be able to help out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jackb Posted March 8, 2011 Share Posted March 8, 2011 (edited) ThumpNugget, Thanks soooo much for posting these. For some time I have been searching for BYTE archives. The quality of the scans is excellent - you did an outstanding job and I appreciate that they are in color. I look forward to downloading more issues as they become available! Edited March 8, 2011 by jackb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 8, 2011 Author Share Posted March 8, 2011 ThumpNugget, I don't see much usage on the ftp mirror I offered... got maybe 10-15 users downloading the set. If you think it will help, you may make the link clickable - maybe people are too lazy to edit the url and abuse the other mirrors. Maybe you should also mention on each new pdf's post the mirrors as I doubt people that just come from search engines would go to the first post to find about mirrors. I'll do that as soon as I finish replying. I appreciate all the help you guys have given here I think since during most of February there were only a few mags that traffic has died down... I've had a bit of insomnia this past few days so I put some time into extra scanning - there should be four mags this week including two large ones (about a gig total in size - 1500 or so pages). Traffic might pick up! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
exobuzz Posted March 8, 2011 Share Posted March 8, 2011 (edited) I'll do that as soon as I finish replying. I appreciate all the help you guys have given here I think since during most of February there were only a few mags that traffic has died down... I've had a bit of insomnia this past few days so I put some time into extra scanning - there should be four mags this week including two large ones (about a gig total in size - 1500 or so pages). Traffic might pick up! Well, you are certainly scanning them faster than I can read em :-) your ongoing efforts are much appreciated just to note, all mirrors are now included in the files.exotica.org.uk redirector, so you might want to list that first. Edited March 8, 2011 by exobuzz 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 8, 2011 Author Share Posted March 8, 2011 BYTE Vol 11-09 1986-09 The 68000 Family - 478 Pages 330,720,249 bytes BYTE Vol 11-09 from September 1986... Oh I like the big issues! The early issues are great but I just have a thing for the 81-86 issues.. So I made a statement a couple months back with another 86 issue that it was the only time an Atari made the cover.. There is an Atari ST on the cover here so obviously I was wrong This issues feature is the Motorola 68000 processor and the machines that used it. The articles were all excellent but for me what made this issue was the reviews: A Franklin Ace, Turbo Prolog, Leading Edge, Xerox 6060.. WordPerfect! Sweet! The article on CRCs was a close second! Make sure to read the Microbytes about the a Terabyte optical disk! FEATURES PRODUCT PREVIEW: LABVIEW: LABORATORY VIRTUAL INSTRUMENT ENGINEERING WORKBENCH CIARCIA'S CIRCUIT CELLAR: BUILD A HARDWARE DATA ENCRYPTOR PROGRAMMING PROJECT: CALCULATING CRCs BY BITS AND BYTES PROGRAMMING INSIGHT: BREAKING OUT KEYED FILE ACCESS IN BASIC REAL TIME UNDER REAL PASCAL THEME: 68000 MACHINES 68000 TRIPS AND TRAPS UNIX AND THE MC68000 A COMPARISON OF MC68000 FAMILY PROCESSORS ATARI ST SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT AMIGA ANIMATION AMIGA VS. MACINTOSH REVIEWS REVIEWER'S NOTEBOOK THE FRANKLIN ACE 2200 THE LEADING EDGE MODEL D PC THE XEROX 6060 THE TURNER HALL CARD TURBO PROLOG SOFTWARE CAROUSEL PARADOX 1.1 WORDPERFECT 4.1 REVIEW FEEDBACK KERNEL COMPUTING AT CHAOS MANOR: A Busy DAY ACCORDING TO WEBSTER: Two FINE PRODUCTS Turbo Prolog and LightspeedC BYTE JAPAN: PERSPECTIVES ON HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE BYTE U.K.: TURBOCHARGING MANDELBROT APPLICATIONS ONLY: SING YE MACPRAISES by BEST OF BIX AMIGA . ATARI ST. IBM PC AND COMPATIBLES MACINTOSH PASCAL Nucleus EDITORIAL: COLLEGE CREDITS THROUGH COMMUNICATIONS MICROBYTES LETTERS WHATS NEW EVENTS AND CLUBS ASK BYTE CIRCUIT CELLAR FEEDBACK BOOK REVIEWS FIXES CHAOS M ANOR MAIL. BOMB RESULTS Download it here: BYTE Vol 11-09 1986-09 The 68000 Family Cover Index 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+wood_jl Posted March 8, 2011 Share Posted March 8, 2011 BYTE Vol 11-09 1986-09 The 68000 Family - 478 Pages 330,720,249 bytes Aw, shucks ThumpNugget. I wasn't finished thinking you were "the man" for the last issue. Muchos gracias. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 8, 2011 Author Share Posted March 8, 2011 BYTE Vol 11-09 1986-09 The 68000 Family - 478 Pages 330,720,249 bytes Aw, shucks ThumpNugget. I wasn't finished thinking you were "the man" for the last issue. Muchos gracias. Gracias señor! yo vivo a dar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keatah Posted March 8, 2011 Share Posted March 8, 2011 Powerhouse!! Thumpie's scanner is powered by this!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 8, 2011 Author Share Posted March 8, 2011 Powerhouse!! Thumpie's scanner is powered by this!! There should be 10 empty bottles of mountain dew, some peanut butter malted milk balls, and an energizer bunny in that pic! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vk2tds Posted March 9, 2011 Share Posted March 9, 2011 ThumpNugget: Thanks for all this. I have a heap of BYTE magazines mostly from the 1980's that you can slice and cut if needed. I would offer to scan these myself for you by my sheet feed Fujitsu really needs replacing after having done 100,000 pages or so! But I can certainly ship you the BYTE magazines from here in Oz if needed at my cost. Why have I done 100,000 pages? Well, I have scanned most of issues of Electronics Australia and ETI and a number of other magazines from the mid-1970's onwards in TIFF monochrome format. Not as nice as the PDF's of BYTE but readable and since I started in the 1990's disk space was an issue. But I have issues here if people need them - distributing the full collection is an issue since there is a copyright holder, at least at the moment Darryl 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hans Posted March 9, 2011 Share Posted March 9, 2011 Darryl: I have ancient ETI magazines too (I got mine for free from a kind neighbor when I was a child in Eastern Canada)!! Late 1970s/early 80s stuff - those made sense to scan in b/w since there was little/no colour in the magazines themselves. Ah memories - I recall the funny subscription ads they ran, as well as articles written by Steve Rimmer. If there exist pdf copies of these, I'd love to get my hands on them. ThumpNugget: You totally rule. Thanks again for placing such a great resource on the web. Oh, and more 1980s Bytes please ThumpNugget: Thanks for all this. I have a heap of BYTE magazines mostly from the 1980's that you can slice and cut if needed. I would offer to scan these myself for you by my sheet feed Fujitsu really needs replacing after having done 100,000 pages or so! But I can certainly ship you the BYTE magazines from here in Oz if needed at my cost. Why have I done 100,000 pages? Well, I have scanned most of issues of Electronics Australia and ETI and a number of other magazines from the mid-1970's onwards in TIFF monochrome format. Not as nice as the PDF's of BYTE but readable and since I started in the 1990's disk space was an issue. But I have issues here if people need them - distributing the full collection is an issue since there is a copyright holder, at least at the moment Darryl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted March 9, 2011 Author Share Posted March 9, 2011 ThumpNugget: Thanks for all this. I have a heap of BYTE magazines mostly from the 1980's that you can slice and cut if needed. I would offer to scan these myself for you by my sheet feed Fujitsu really needs replacing after having done 100,000 pages or so! But I can certainly ship you the BYTE magazines from here in Oz if needed at my cost. Why have I done 100,000 pages? Well, I have scanned most of issues of Electronics Australia and ETI and a number of other magazines from the mid-1970's onwards in TIFF monochrome format. Not as nice as the PDF's of BYTE but readable and since I started in the 1990's disk space was an issue. But I have issues here if people need them - distributing the full collection is an issue since there is a copyright holder, at least at the moment Darryl Hey there Darryl, I really appreicate the offer! Here is what is missing up through 1986: Vol 4: 10,11,12 Vol 6: 6,7,11 Vol 7: 1,2,5,8,9,10 Vol 8: 1,3,4,6,7,11 Vol 9: 8,10,12 Vol 10: 2,3,4,5,6,7,10,12 Vol 11: 11 Might be a bit pricey from your side of the world I am also wondering how much longer my current scanner is going to last.. So far the worst it has given me is some wierd sounds while scanning but still running like a champ (not a single paper jam since returning from vacation - over 2000 pages). Have you tought of converting those tiffs to pdfs for future distribution? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Samir Posted March 9, 2011 Share Posted March 9, 2011 I have a UPS account with commercial rates if that can help with logistics. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vk2tds Posted March 9, 2011 Share Posted March 9, 2011 OK... I have just checked my list, and here is what I have that you are missing, to the end of volume 11... Vol 6: 7/June 11/Nov Vol 7: 5/May 8/Aug 10/Oct Vol 8: 3/Mar 4/Apr 7/Jul 11/Nov Vol 9: 12/Nov 10/Sep Vol 10: 2/Feb 3/Mar 4/Apr 5/May 6/June 7/Jul 10/Oct 12/Nov [Note: Vol 10 has 13 issues...][February does not have a front cover] This should be 19 issues. If you don't need them quickly I can ship them via sea mail and they should get there in about three months I am guessing. No use wasting money on air mail if they are just going to sit on a table at your end. Up to you really... And do we need to be looking for a new scanner for you :-) Or at least find you some sewing machine oil for some of the bearings and gears Darryl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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