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This is an original edition of Pen-Based Computing: The Journal of Stylus Systems, the premier industry newsletter for consumer and industrial stylus-based computing systems.
Issues of the newsletter are in the permanent collection of the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California (donated by Xerox PARC, a charter subscriber).
Artifact Details
Stylus Publishing
United States
English
May, 1991
Sixteen pages on tan saddled-stitched paper.
In this issue:
- UPS Goes PBC
- Notes From the Editors
- Notes From the Pen Windows Conference
- Windows 4 Waits in the Wings
- PenPoint vs. Pen Windows: Developer Reactions
- X-Pen? Pen-X? Uni-Pen? Uni-Pen-X? UniX-Pen?
- Motorola Joins Portable Computer CPU Fray
- A Good Pen is Hard to Find
- PenPoint, PenPoint, Who's Got the PenPoint?
- Why We're Moving to Pen-Based Computing
- Rounding the First Corner: The Race Continues
- Book Review: The Power of PenPoint
- Put It In Cursive Writing
- Soviet Firm Has Impressive Cursive Recognition Technology
- Pen-Based Resources on the Rise
8.5" x 11" (16 pages)
1054-4011
PER-PBC-0000
May, 1991
Acquired from Publisher
2018-07-17
About the Organization
Stylus Publishing was founded in January, 1991 by Nicholas Baran and Jonathan Erickson, two veteran technology editors. Baran was former west coast bureau chief for BYTE magazine and editor of Baran's Tech Letter (a newsletter covering the NeXT computer platform). Erickson was the long-time editor of Dr. Dobb's Journal, the leading software development magazine of the time.
Originally published quarterly, the newsletter was acquired by Volksware, Inc. in December 1993, evolving initially into a bi-monthly and later full monthly publication. The newsletter was published and edited by former contributing editor John Jerney.
People Associated with this Artifact
No people information available.
Associated Products
No products information available.
Editorial
This is an original edition of Pen-Based Computing: The Journal of Stylus Systems, the premier industry newsletter for consumer and industrial stylus-based computing systems.
Issues of the newsletter are in the permanent collection of the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California (donated by Xerox PARC, a charter subscriber).
Oral History
No oral history available.
Media
No additional media available.