Hey #bookstodon, what's your most exciting vintage computer book?
Anything computer-y goes: programming, video games, fiction, manuals, hacking, (sub)cultures, networking, etc.
@pixelambacht probably my Whole Earth Catalog, which predates PCs but has a lot of tech stuff.
Or (ugh) I guess my early Wireds are now vintage
@pixelambacht I have a reprint of Computer Lib, this thing from 1974 taught me that many of computer-society and computer-culture problems that we have today existed before Home Computers were a thing.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Lib/Dream_Machines
You know what, it's a great time to go and re-read some of it.
@retrotechshop @pixelambacht I have that one, too! There was a mini genre of sci fi-ish authors writing books about microcomputers when they were new. I think Crichton wrote one, too. And someone else. (Sorry, away from my library now.)
@pixelambacht A bit more “typesetting” and a bit less “computer” but still quite up your alley, I would think: https://archive.org/details/FundamentalsOfModernPhotoComposition
@onpaperwings fyi recently I scanned a few more Seybold books. They are on Internet Archive in the usual place. They are all a variation on the same theme, but maybe you’ll find some more interesting nuggets in there.
Should be 3 new books in total and maybe also a paper.
@nina_kali_nina Oh wow that sounds like a fantastic book! I see huge prices for it on ebay, It's on the wish list for when I come across it for a fair price, this is my jam!
@pixelambacht protip: the reprint from 1989 should be far more affordable than 74/75 versions
@mwichary @pixelambacht I love that genre. I feel like it contains prophesies. Here's the one by Michael Crichton you mentioned.
@pixelambacht This, about the development of the Ericsson AXE digital telephone exchange