When I first got into computers, I lived about 30 minutes from his home town.
In middle school. I was reading back issues of BYTE magazine, it was all technical jargon noise, but I just kept at it until I got the hang of it. This was back when BYTE still published full source code for featured programs, and there was Steve Ciracia's Circuit Cellar for electronic schematics and timing diagrams.
The computer industry seemed a different, glamorous planet from south-Georgia (not the island) slash pine swampland. And it was... but not that far from Carrollton.
> The bankers were dubious. Everyone knew that computers were large and expensive, the domain of big business. “The banker asked me, ‘Well, how many of these do you think you'll sell?'” Roberts remembered later.
It's so weird reading this thinking that bankers used to actually consider funding such ventures.
> For a second, Roberts thought that this was the end of MITS. Instead, the banker sighed and signed off on the loan.
Wow, I'm green with intergenerational envy. Sounds like a parallel universe where people were not worthless cogs in a big machine.
Oh they still do: I work in a giant bank, in Hong Kong, and you would be surprised by the diversity of people. Squeezing blue collar people via unsound consumer loans is a common misconception of what our job is (at least that's what I assume your view is?): very often we finance factory projects led by people we've worked with before, we fight our bosses, we resist corporatist apathy, and we don't always just try to get a high margin for a low effort / low quality service.
I've seen true honor, sincere client relationship, difficult pricing decisions, painful loss swallowing, etc. Banks are really made of humans, and I invite you to try working in one one day: it is really interesting, and I dare say really useful to society, even if I know most people smirk when I say this...
Interesting. I don't think such banks exist in the west. I only know it used to be that way based on what my dad told me. In my experience (having traveled around a bit to Europe and Australia), banks in most western countries are almost completely centered around mortgages to buy houses and investment properties and won't loan for anything else. Maybe they will make business loans for very high net worth individuals or big companies like large mining projects but seems very rare and I've never heard of anyone getting a loan to fund their small business.
My employer is headquartered west of China, in Europe, so is probably part of "the west" as you call it. Banks are absolutely not centered around mortgages (only): this is what YOUR life is centered around, the middle class is composed mostly of employees savings for their home, the main source of their wealth. It is the case in the "non-west" like in China, very much so, but is not the only business of banks.
My dad had a small business in France, and all banks were ready to lend to him, no problem, with a competition on the rate. They would ask him for his business plan, discuss a bit, try to time the loan with their own need, increase the rate if it was a riskier plan. He did re-negotiation, emergency loans, growth-centric new loans, renovation loans, in several banks for over 30 years until he died last year and... one of his employees took a business loans to buy back the business for a million euros from us, his heirs.
How do your bakers, dentists, auto-shop people finance their business ? It cannot be cash-only, family-only, or lying on fake mortgage applications... Maybe your country is really special ? One thing maybe... I don't think banks advertise these very much on their website or whatnot, so maybe you have the impression it doesn't exist ? Usually people with small businesses have some accountant contacts first, then start having contacts in every bank's business loan division and they just meet directly to discuss. At least that's how my dad always seemed to do, when he did his "bank tours" to finance a new project.
Are you then personally liable for the loans? Or are they made against the business assets? In other words, if you fail to repay the loan will you typically lose your house?
Typically, business loans are secured against the assets of the company as well as the personal liability of partners (even if it's a limited liability company).
But if the company borrows tens of millions of dollars, the home (which itself will already be financed, so realistically only the home equity) of the founder/owner of the company is small compared to the company's financing needs. Banks will prefer that the management 'have skin in the game', but from a purely recovery perspective ('loss given default', to the bank) it's negligible. So, non-recourse loans will be typical for large corporations. Unless they're owned by a billionaire.
This is why you and your spouse have a prenuptial agreement that keeps your finances separate, and the house out of reach of your creditors.
I'd assume most of these loans are backed by a govt program: SBA loans, farm loans, etc. Same as Fannie Mae for mortgages. Banks don't want to take any risk, only risk free profits.
Banks in the US are still happy to make business loans (to established businesses with existing revenue and assets), though a lot of that business is shifting to private credit. What they are definitely not willing to do is fund risk ventures with no collateral. I don't know that they've ever really done that, but some of these rose tinted stories from midcentury suggest maybe they did? I honestly don't know. The MITS case in particular seems borderline: this is an established mail-order model rocket business, but also the loan is for an unproven scheme in a barely-related business. Maybe that's replicable in today's business environment, maybe not.
“We’re not all the same!”, the nerds said in unison. “Frank here is into DnD while Bob is only interested in gaming RPGs; Liza doesn’t play computer games and is mostly interested in anime and Japanese culture; meanwhile Frank is into hiking, geotagging, and photo editing.”
When people see stereotypes or “types”, the point is never—unless they are genuinely denigrating them—that they are completely alien or that whatever institution they belong to is not “made up of humans”.
Ed Roberts may not be a household name (like Bill Gates or Microsoft), but the Altair is certainly well-known.
It was also preceded by some notable and influential machines such as the Xerox Alto. CP/M was developed for an intel machine which also preceded the Altair.
It took me roughly 5 seconds to go to Wikipedia, type "CP/M" into the search bar, scroll down to "History", where I found a link to an article about the Intel Intellec:
of course, there's also the IMSAI. I personally lusted after the Sol (real wood sides!)
Intellec seems to have been missing from the hobbyist headspace, though, which was critical for that early phase of the industry - not to mention that kits were huge in those days. Adults with a couple grand (real money in those days) to blow on a mostly-impractical but cool toy...
The Tech Time Traveler channel has a lot of interesting 70's vintage computer stuff including this more detailed video from 2 days ago on programming the Altair 8800 including Kill the Bit and The Fool on the Hill: https://youtu.be/CZgD_bvPm0k&t=1594
This is the money quote to show what type of person Roberts was
> “The most important thing is to be honorable, and kind of work from there,” he replied. He spoke about the various times MITS had come close to failure, only to be saved by the blind trust placed in him by others. “If you have integrity, that makes up for a lot of things. A lot of inadequacies. I never lied to anyone. I always told them exactly what the situation was and what we could do to get out of it. That’s true for life in general as well. Don’t lie to yourself.”
Gates still allowed Microsoft Research to publish an enormous amount of useful research. Something that I don't see at that scale at e.g. Apple. He is just a very clever businessman.
Captains of industry (including the Gateses, Jobses, and Musks of this world) might not be nice people necessarily (and often aren't), but I still appreciate their contributions.
Microsoft's products from the 1970s and 1980s (notably BASIC, Word and Excel) were certainly influential. Windows delivered a Mac-style GUI for cheap PCs. MSR as noted has produced all sorts of good research.
According to the article, Roberts believed that Gates gave a false testimony to the court in order to gain property rights over "Altair BASIC". "Just a very clever businessman"?
Maybe Gates saw, that although the Altair was a great demonstrator of the groundbreaking Intel 8080 it was built around, real user value was yet to be delivered by either successors or competitors to the Altair. Maybe Gates saw the value in his BASIC implementation and wanted to maintain the option to sell it to other home computer manufacturers.
For people interested in this era and afterwards, Halt and Catch Fire is worth checking out as a series that attempts to capture some of the spirit of the time:
40 comments
[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 105 ms ] threadIn middle school. I was reading back issues of BYTE magazine, it was all technical jargon noise, but I just kept at it until I got the hang of it. This was back when BYTE still published full source code for featured programs, and there was Steve Ciracia's Circuit Cellar for electronic schematics and timing diagrams.
The computer industry seemed a different, glamorous planet from south-Georgia (not the island) slash pine swampland. And it was... but not that far from Carrollton.
Dang.
It's so weird reading this thinking that bankers used to actually consider funding such ventures.
> For a second, Roberts thought that this was the end of MITS. Instead, the banker sighed and signed off on the loan.
Wow, I'm green with intergenerational envy. Sounds like a parallel universe where people were not worthless cogs in a big machine.
I've seen true honor, sincere client relationship, difficult pricing decisions, painful loss swallowing, etc. Banks are really made of humans, and I invite you to try working in one one day: it is really interesting, and I dare say really useful to society, even if I know most people smirk when I say this...
My dad had a small business in France, and all banks were ready to lend to him, no problem, with a competition on the rate. They would ask him for his business plan, discuss a bit, try to time the loan with their own need, increase the rate if it was a riskier plan. He did re-negotiation, emergency loans, growth-centric new loans, renovation loans, in several banks for over 30 years until he died last year and... one of his employees took a business loans to buy back the business for a million euros from us, his heirs.
How do your bakers, dentists, auto-shop people finance their business ? It cannot be cash-only, family-only, or lying on fake mortgage applications... Maybe your country is really special ? One thing maybe... I don't think banks advertise these very much on their website or whatnot, so maybe you have the impression it doesn't exist ? Usually people with small businesses have some accountant contacts first, then start having contacts in every bank's business loan division and they just meet directly to discuss. At least that's how my dad always seemed to do, when he did his "bank tours" to finance a new project.
But if the company borrows tens of millions of dollars, the home (which itself will already be financed, so realistically only the home equity) of the founder/owner of the company is small compared to the company's financing needs. Banks will prefer that the management 'have skin in the game', but from a purely recovery perspective ('loss given default', to the bank) it's negligible. So, non-recourse loans will be typical for large corporations. Unless they're owned by a billionaire.
This is why you and your spouse have a prenuptial agreement that keeps your finances separate, and the house out of reach of your creditors.
When people see stereotypes or “types”, the point is never—unless they are genuinely denigrating them—that they are completely alien or that whatever institution they belong to is not “made up of humans”.
It was also preceded by some notable and influential machines such as the Xerox Alto. CP/M was developed for an intel machine which also preceded the Altair.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intellec
The second sentence in that article says:
> The Intellec computers were among the first microcomputers ever sold, predating the Altair 8800 by at least two years.
of course, there's also the IMSAI. I personally lusted after the Sol (real wood sides!)
Intellec seems to have been missing from the hobbyist headspace, though, which was critical for that early phase of the industry - not to mention that kits were huge in those days. Adults with a couple grand (real money in those days) to blow on a mostly-impractical but cool toy...
Proud to see it.
If you're visiting Albuquerque you can see the plaque marking the spot where Microsoft started:
https://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/13927
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=toSRmKKiosQ&t=1224
> Allen had even arranged for Roberts to be interviewed as part of a computer history project for high school students.
I'm not in a place where I can listen, but these seem likely candidates for these interviews:
- https://archive.org/details/EdRobertsInterview1995
- https://archive.computerhistory.org/resources/access/text/20...
- https://archive.org/details/RememberingEdRobertsTheFatherOfT...
This is the money quote to show what type of person Roberts was
> “The most important thing is to be honorable, and kind of work from there,” he replied. He spoke about the various times MITS had come close to failure, only to be saved by the blind trust placed in him by others. “If you have integrity, that makes up for a lot of things. A lot of inadequacies. I never lied to anyone. I always told them exactly what the situation was and what we could do to get out of it. That’s true for life in general as well. Don’t lie to yourself.”
Such a sharp contrast to Gates’ behavior.
Microsoft's products from the 1970s and 1980s (notably BASIC, Word and Excel) were certainly influential. Windows delivered a Mac-style GUI for cheap PCs. MSR as noted has produced all sorts of good research.
Do you also appreciate the contributions of street robbers to trickling down of the wealth and drug dealers to the freedom of commerce?
https://imdb.com/title/tt2543312/