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This is a transcript of an audio interview. This transcript may contain errors - if you're using this material for research, etc. please verify with the original recorded interview.
 
This is a transcript of an audio interview. This transcript may contain errors - if you're using this material for research, etc. please verify with the original recorded interview.
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Source: ANTIC: The Atari 8-Bit Podcast
 
Source: ANTIC: The Atari 8-Bit Podcast
Source URL: TKTK
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 +
Source URL: http://ataripodcast.libsyn.com/antic-interview-280-david-and-betsy-ahl-creative-computing-magazine
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Interviewer: Kevin Savetz
 
Interviewer: Kevin Savetz
   −
interview TK
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  Kevin:            I'm interested in how you guys got together. Was it some sort of
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                    office romance? [laughs]
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  Betsy:            It started before then. I was working at Drew University and I was
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                    dating the computer science professor. He invited Dave...he was a
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                    subscriber to Creative Computing. I can remember being at his house
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                    and picking up a copy of this magazine and thinking, "Creative
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                    Computing," and laughing. "What kind of a title is that?"
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                    He invited Dave to come speak to one of his classes. While he was
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                    there, he said, "I should stop by your placement office. We're
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                    starting to expand. I'm looking for some people." Right? Am I
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                    getting this right? I was looking for other opportunities, so I
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                    sent him my resume. Many months later, he hired me.
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  David:            She still smarts about that.
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                    [laughter]
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  David:            I interviewed her in, I don't know, April or so.
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  Betsy:            You interviewed me on April 17th and you did not hire me until
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                    August 1st. [laughs]
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  David:            A lot was going on that year. That was '78.
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  Betsy:            It was a really long time after that that we got married. We didn't
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                    get married until 10 years later.
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  David:            Actually, I had hired Betsy as our business manager. That's what I
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                    really needed.
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  Kevin:            Not a wife, then.
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  Betsy:            Not wife then, either.
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  David:            Not at that point. We had 2 buildings.
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  Betsy:            We had one.
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  David:            Oh, well I was looking for...
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  Betsy:            My first job was to find another building.
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  David:            We were expanding like crazy. In fact, one of the reasons that I
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                    didn't hire her sooner, I had just left my day job at AT&T, and was
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                    facing up to, "Oh my gosh, can I afford to take a salary out of
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                    Creative Computing?" Yes, we had expanded a lot, but can I even pay
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                    myself, much less other senior people? I left AT&T in July, and
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                    finally by August it became clear I really have to get this
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                    administration end of things under control.
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                    The editorial was OK. I had enough outside contributors that were
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                    going along with what we were doing in-house that I could continue
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                    with that, but it was the other end of things where we really had
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                    some problems. So then we go to 2 separate facilities. One was a 2
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                    family house on the other side of Morristown, and the other was a
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                    converted greenhouse garage, which is where I started. So, Betsy
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                    was in the greenhouse garage where I had the administration side of
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                    things, and I was at the house and that was the editorial and art
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                    and...
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  Betsy:            Software.
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  David:            ...putting the magazine together. Software, right. So she would
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                    come over from her place to my office every day or two just to let
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                    me know what's going on, and we'd get together. But it wasn't until
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                    I don't' remember the date when Betsy was saying, "Well, I'd like
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                    to get into..."
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  Betsy:            Well I had spent all my summers in college and two thereafter
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                    working at our local newspaper, writing editing and putting the
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                    whole thing together, so I think I more or less just said, "We've
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                    got all these new product announcements that we don't have anybody
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                    to do, why don't I just do them?" So, I started out doing the press
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                    releases and things.
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  David:            Her newspaper experience was first in high school covering sports.
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  Betsy:            Yeah, I started out covering the unpopular sports as a senior in
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                    high school. Because they didn't want a girl to write about the
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                    important sports. So they let the girl write about the unimportant
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                    sports, which turned out to be the winning sports, at this small
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                    New Jersey high school. That's how I started.
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  David:            And then at the newspaper, you started by writing obituaries,
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                    right?
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  Betsy:            Well, it's one of the things I did. I always wanted to be a Spanish
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                    teacher. I didn't know anything about this. So, I got this sports-
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                    writing job by way of a babysitting job, I babysat for the
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                    publisher's kids and on the way home one night he said to me, "We
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                    always have a boy from the school who writes about the sports for
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                    the paper, do you know anybody?" and I said, "Well, I know the guy
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                    who did it last year, and if he could do it, I could do it."
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                    So I did that and didn't' think much more of it. Went off to
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                    college, came back over spring break, and ran into the guy in the
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                    grocery store and he said, "Would you like a job working for the
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                    paper this summer?" And I said sure. I had no idea whether he
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                    wanted me to sweep the floors or what, but it was a job so I took
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                    it. It was in the editorial department.
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                    And I learned from some very serious journalists who had worked for
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                    a very good paper, the Newark Evening News, which was a very
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                    serious paper that probably was too serious and folded, probably in
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                    the mid '60s, but these people were really good journalists and
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                    they taught me a lot.
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                    I think it was that first year, about halfway through the summer
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                    the publisher was on vacation, the editor was going to go on
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                    vacation when the publisher came back and the publisher, the day he
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                    was supposed to come back had appendicitis, had to have an
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                    appendectomy which back in those days was a much bigger deal than
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                    it is now. The editor said, "Well, I'm leaving." [laughs] And there
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                    I was. I was running this little paper.
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  David:            So I figured if you can run a newspaper, even though it's just a
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                    summer job, she could do a lot for us. Well, Betsy continued to
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                    handle the administrative things for really quite awhile and, as
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                    she said, probably was initially doing new product releases. Cause
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                    you get just tons of it over the transom and from these smaller
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                    companies...
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  Kevin:            So you'd like get a press release and then you'd rewrite it, that
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                    sort of things?
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  Betsy:            Well we had a new product section and it was a format, a style for
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                    them, for each one. If they sent a photo, do a photo, a cut line
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                    for it. Basically what I do is let them pile up and then sort
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                    through and figure out which ones were worthy of attention. And
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                    then it was kind of just filler. They ran in one column and when
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                    you came to the end of the magazine whatever you had leftover you
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                    would fill in with these.
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  David:            And the thing is that the companies that were putting out these
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                    press releases, this was back in the, what '76, '77 or so, tiny
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                    little companies. They had no marketing expertise so they were
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                    sending us, in some cases, not quite handwritten but pretty crude.
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                    So it took some editing and some real work to make them readable.
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                    And then, as Betsy said, you had to guess. OK, which one, this is a
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                    significant product but is this guy going to be able to make this
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                    company go or is it just going to flop? And we tried to be
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                    responsible to the readers. Reporting on things that weren't just a
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                    wonderful great new idea but something that they were going to have
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                    on the market that was going to get some support and everything
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                    else. So anyway. That was a long story of how we got together.
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  Kevin:            I still don't know how you got together.
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  Betsy:            We were working in an office about as large as this banquette here
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                    together. Because when we first started working together we didn't
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                    have this other house. So it was the two of us. You had an actual
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                    desk I believe. I had a table that he had made out of particle
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                    board. Yeah it was fancy and I had to put duct tape along it
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                    because the edge was making holes in my clothes.
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                    So we worked in this office back to back, sort of got to know each
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                    other, and became friends, little by little. He said to me, when
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                    you're looking for this building, it would be a good thing if there
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                    was a place for me to live because I'm in the process of getting
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                    separated from my wife. Which it turned out you didn't do right
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                    away but eventually you did. Right?
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  David:            Well, it was three months later. That was right away in a sense.
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                    What precipitated that was we had a woman that was working in the
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                    mailroom and she got in cahoots with somebody in the accounting
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                    department and they started working a little embezzlement.
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  Kevin:            This was at the [inaudible 00:13:49] ?
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  David:            Pardon?
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  Betsy:            At Creative Computing.
 +
 
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  David:            No, at Creative Computing. This was just after Betsy was hired. In
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                    fact, they had it going on before and I mean they were very good at
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                    it. What they did is they set up a bank account in the name of
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                    Creative Computing in the next county. And they would take very
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                    fourth or fifth check and it might be a subscription, it might be
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                    paying for an ad or something...
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  Betsy:            It was mostly the advertisers.
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  David:            Well it was both. And then they put that into their bank account.
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                    And then the one that was in the accounting department would mark
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                    the thing as paid.
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  Betsy:            No, she didn't. That was her mistake.
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  David:            Well, she didn't.
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  Betsy:            Because that wasn't her job.
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  David:            Well she blew one. In any event it was my advertising manager that
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                    we had sent an overdue notice to one of the advertisers.
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  Betsy:            It was Apple.
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  David:            Huh?
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  Betsy:            It was Apple. It was Regis McKenna, it was Apple's agency.
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  David:            And they said, we paid that. And a woman said, well send me proof.
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                    And they did. And we looked at the bank where it was deposited and
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                    then we called in local detective, police department. And they got
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                    the bank records and said, "How much do you think this was?" Well
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                    no they didn't say that, they said, this is probably a lot more
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                    than you thought.
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                    And it turned out to be well over $100,000. And our total annual,
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                    not even profit at that point...well, the gross was just about a
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                    million at that point, not quite, but close to it. So $100,000 was
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                    a big, big chunk 10 percent.
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  Kevin:            When was this?
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  David:            '78. And, so, obviously we fired these two. And then the court
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                    finally, they determined that they had also, one of them had been
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                    involved in welfare fraud and other stuff and the court ordered
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                    them to pay it back at the rate of, I don't know...
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  Betsy:            47 cents a week.
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  David:            It was some tiny amount.
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  Kevin:            [inaudible 00:16:26]
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                    [laughter and crosstalk]
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  Betsy:            Course they'll never pay anything.
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  David:            And we got one payment you know, and that was it.
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  Betsy:            And she was ordered to do public service. Like who wants someone
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                    doing public service for them who's done something like that?
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  Kevin:            Magazines back then, probably any business but, they were a hotbed
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                    of intrigue. You had that happened and then the whole Bike Magazine
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                    getting stolen.
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 +
  David:            So Betsy actually, in response to that brought, in response to the
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                    embezzlement brought in her Sister-in-Law Bobbi, and I think your
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                    mother too...
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  Betsy:            It was Bobbi's mother.
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  David:            Bobbi's mother, OK. But one to...
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  Betsy:            My mother in law. I was a widow at the time.
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  David:            ...do some of the accounting because we didn't have an accountant
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                    and wanted just to help out and make some calls to advertisers and
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                    say can you speed up your payment a little bit and also calls to
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                    people that we owed money to, hey we're going to be maybe a little
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                    late. It really didn't look good. That was just a huge amount of
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                    money and so we had to stretch things out and hope that the growth
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                    continued so we could recover some of this.
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                    Betsy really rescued us there. It was amazing. We finally did
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                    stretch things out. What precipitated the separation with my wife
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                    at the time is I went home and told her this had happened and
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                    everything.
 +
 
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  Betsy:            It was Thanksgiving weekend. Day before Thanksgiving.
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  David:            The day before Thanksgiving is when we got all the information from
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                    the police department and I went home to my wife and she said, "You
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                    dumb...," well I won't repeat the whole thing but, "You are so
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                    stupid. You trust people." "Yes, I trust people." "You shouldn't
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                    trust people like that. Get out of the house. I can't put up with
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                    this anymore." So it was a good thing we had a two family house.
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  Betsy:            We had this two family house.
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  David:            I moved into the bedroom on one side.
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  Betsy:            He had his office on one side of the top floor in the back bedroom
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                    and his bedroom in the back bedroom on the other side and his
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                    kitchen. [laughs]
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  Kevin:            Is this the place I was reading about where your bedroom was above
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                    the kitchen?
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  Betsy:            Yes. The Ted Nelson.
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  David:            Anyway, a lot of things precipitated. Because of that, we had to
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                    make some other changes on personnel and move some people around. I
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                    think after that then Betsy took more of a role in the editorial
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                    end of things.
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  Kevin:            Stayed there until the bitter end.
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  Betsy:            The bitter end. Actually, I was there after he was gone.
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 +
  David:            That's true.
 +
 
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  Betsy:            Ziff continued to pay me several months after they closed the
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                    magazine to stay behind and clean up because we have a 75,000
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                    square foot building. Make sure that we don't dispose of the
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                    hardware and just basically get it ready.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            When you quit at the phone company to start a magazine, that must
 +
                    have been scary.
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  David:            I had left Digital Equipment in 1974, and I'm sure you read the
 +
                    whole rationale behind that, and joined AT&T in marketing,
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                    educational marketing. Same thing I was doing at Deck but obviously
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                    marketing different products to a different mix of customers. AT&T,
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                    back then and perhaps today, they had a real formula that you're in
 +
                    a job for two years and then they rotate you out or they put you in
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                    another job.
 +
                    The way AT&T works is they have certain steps. There's a manager
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                    and then a director level. There are levels, one, two, three, four,
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                    five. The operating companies, like Pacific Bell and so on, have
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                    similar steps that are considered a half step below AT&T. What they
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                    do is they rotate you out to an operating company, a half step
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                    promotion, they rotate you back into AT&T, now you're a full step.
 +
                    You never get a full step in one company.
 +
 
 +
                    They had offered me a rotation to Southern Bell. Birmingham,
 +
                    Alabama. "No. No." Then probably two or three months later said
 +
                    we've got an opening in Wisconsin Tel. "Oh my gosh. Come on,
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                    something sensible." I turned them down, which was bad. You can't
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                    turn down. If you turn down three you might as well retire.
 +
 
 +
                    The third one was, in a sense, it wasn't a promotion but it was a
 +
                    sideways job jump within AT&T itself. I went from having the
 +
                    education group, which was about eight people, to corporate
 +
                    communications, which is about 100 people and a huge budget. I was
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                    responsible for all of the marketing communications for the whole
 +
                    Bell system. Not advertising.
 +
 
 +
                    We had seminar centers, put out all kinds of educational pamphlets,
 +
                    even a magazine for our customers on how to use the equipment. I
 +
                    was doing that. It's a big job. It's a 50 hour a week job. Creative
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                    Computing was halfway down the block. I'd go there at lunch time,
 +
                    see how things were doing.
 +
 
 +
                    As I said a little bit ago, when it looked like we were going to
 +
                    hit a million dollars I said I've got to get serious about this.
 +
                    That's when I resigned from AT&T. That was probably the first, I
 +
                    shouldn't say the first, but that was a major problem with my wife
 +
                    at that time. You're leaving AT&T? You're leaving all those
 +
                    benefits? What are you doing, you idiot? We were on the downward
 +
                    spiral at that point and then the embezzlement just sealed the
 +
                    whole thing.
 +
 
 +
                    Leaving any job for an unknown thing like you started a little
 +
                    company and you leave your day job. You're making a real
 +
                    commitment.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Even once you were at Creative full time, it looks like you did a
 +
                    lot of everything. You were writing, you were doing programming,
 +
                    you were being the editor, the publisher and the editor which is
 +
                    not done anymore.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. I don't know. You can correct me. I don't think I was a
 +
                    control freak.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No. You had Phil Ellenberg. You had just hired Phil Ellenberg as
 +
                    the advertising manager. Richie was doing it. Where did he come
 +
                    from? He came from some respectable place. He came from some
 +
                    respectable place, Phil Ellenberg.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, he did.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He was like a real person who had a real job, not like the rest of
 +
                    us. He was the ad manager. I think once you made the step to leave
 +
                    AT&T then you mostly concentrated on the editorial. You weren't
 +
                    selling ads and writing and you had Steve North who was doing a lot
 +
                    of the editorial.
 +
 
 +
  David:            At the beginning, yeah. The thing is I'd be lying if I said I knew
 +
                    how things were going to go, I knew this was going to be a huge
 +
                    magazine some day. I had no clue. When I started Creative Computing
 +
                    there weren't even personal computers at that point. I was
 +
                    convinced, I guess, that they would come about. I had no idea that
 +
                    it would be three months later that the Altair came about. It was
 +
                    more that I thought that an educational magazine like we had been
 +
                    publishing at Deck should continue.
 +
                    Deck had dropped off. They stopped publishing Edu when I left the
 +
                    education group. Well, they published an issue or two but they
 +
                    really weren't serious about continuing it. Then you had all of
 +
                    these people out here in the west coast, the Hewlett Packard
 +
                    computers. They were publishing some good software, they had some
 +
                    good arrangements with Minnesota Educational Computers Consortium
 +
                    and some others to distribute stuff that they developed, but there
 +
                    was no information source for schools and teachers and kids that
 +
                    were using computers.
 +
 
 +
                    That's what I envisioned initially, but then once the Altair and
 +
                    the others came out people buy this kit computer and say what can I
 +
                    do with it? We've got these programs that will run.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            First you have to steal Basic.
 +
 
 +
  David:            What?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            First you have to steal Basic.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I noticed that, I don't know what it's called, the public opinion
 +
                    or I don't know the word, this part here. The number one magazine
 +
                    of computer applications.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was a Davis thing.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It started off first issue a non-profit magazine of educational and
 +
                    recreational. That was November 1970. May/June 1975 the words non-
 +
                    profit disappeared.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He never set it up as a non-profit.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I did not.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You started making a profit.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's right. [laughs]
 +
                    Betsy; It was the unintentionally non-profit.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Three years later it quietly changed into the number one magazine
 +
                    of computer applications and software.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was when Ziff Davis took over.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Really? No, that was '78.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No, that was '78.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, '78.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            He stayed until the end.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Right. OK. You're right. Who knows. We changed it.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It seemed like a good idea at the time.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It's clearly a shift from education to education plus other things.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yes.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I think it was when he realized that if you really wanted to make a
 +
                    profit you had to leave education behind because teachers want
 +
                    everything for free, or they certainly did then.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            They have some websites for teachers. They still do. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Schools, teachers, yeah, they want everything for free and they get
 +
                    a lot for free. Places like Huntington Computer Project. There was
 +
                    one out here, Oregon. Yes, there was. I think it was based right
 +
                    here in Portland. It would have been, right, if it was in Oregon?
 +
                    Yes, there was a computing consortium at that time, Hewlett Packard
 +
                    oriented.
 +
                    Then you had People's Computer Company down in California that was
 +
                    sort of providing stuff to schools. They were mostly into
 +
                    alternative schools and there were a lot of them in the Bay area at
 +
                    that time. In fact, there was a magazine or a newspaper, big thing,
 +
                    I don't know how often it came out, called the "De-school Primer".
 +
 
 +
                    It was for people that...I won't say they were hippies but
 +
                    basically homeschoolers but they got together and said, "We're
 +
                    going to educate our kids outside of the public education system
 +
                    but we don't want to do it individually. We'll get together." There
 +
                    was a big movement there and they were into computers, unlike the
 +
                    public schools back in '75, '76.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Homeschooling back then was very avant-garde. It was not approved.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Not like today. The shift away from education. That, of course, was
 +
                    partially driven by the hardware that was then available to people
 +
                    at home.
 +
                    When I first started the magazine, I had four editors over the
 +
                    years, five I guess, but Steve Gray had been publishing a
 +
                    newsletter, what he called the "Amateur Computer Group Newsletter".
 +
                    It was for engineers who were scavenging up old parts from
 +
                    Honeywell and IBM and GE and Deck and trying to put together a
 +
                    computer. You've got success stories and here's how you can make
 +
                    this worth together.
 +
 
 +
                    That was a long way away from an Altair, but that's what I was
 +
                    focusing on, people that were doing that and education. Changed our
 +
                    focus. You're right. Good observation.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            After that, do you feel the focus changed in the next 10 years?
 +
 
 +
  David:            The focus changed largely due to selling the magazine to Ziff
 +
                    Davis.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            When's that?
 +
 
 +
  David:            We were negotiating for a while and I think the sale finally went
 +
                    through in '83. Yeah, '83. Maybe late '82 but roughly then. They
 +
                    felt that you need more of a business focus, small business and
 +
                    people running businesses out of their home. That's where it
 +
                    started but then we got into real small businesses. I shouldn't say
 +
                    real but a store front or a small manufacturer, something like
 +
                    that. That's probably a direction we would not have gone. I
 +
                    wouldn't have gone on my own.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We had a magazine called "Small Business Computing." Remember?
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's right, we did. I would have kept Creative more targeted on
 +
                    the home market and still education, to some extent, but more on
 +
                    the home and people that were running a business, a single
 +
                    entrepreneur. You could review a spreadsheet or a small business
 +
                    computer or higher end printer or something but not lift it up to
 +
                    that next level up.
 +
                    When you're owned by somebody else and they say this is what we
 +
                    want to do you've got to be responsive to it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Why did you sell? Was it something that had to be done? I've read
 +
                    the official line.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I think the official line is pretty close to the real line. What
 +
                    happened is the first magazine, maybe not the very first but the
 +
                    first sizable magazine, to sell was the Byte and they sold to
 +
                    McGraw Hill. Then there were three or four other sales. At the time
 +
                    there were maybe eight special interest publishers in the country.
 +
                    You had Hurst and CBS magazine and Ziff Davis. Maybe eight serious
 +
                    ones. There were some others that were, "Oh, it'd be nice if we
 +
                    could get into it."
 +
                    What happened is all of us at that point were spending maybe
 +
                    $100,000, $150,000 on circulation promotion. McGraw Hill says we
 +
                    want to get out there, we're going to spend a million dollars.
 +
                    They're mailing 10 times as much as we are. They're going to trade
 +
                    shows with big, elaborate booths and handing out all kinds of...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Free magazines.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Not only free magazines but other stuff. That was half of it. The
 +
                    other half, which was probably more than half, was the advertising
 +
                    sales. We were using reps. We had different reps in different parts
 +
                    of the country, paying the rep commission on the advertising. When
 +
                    you are a McGraw Hill or a Hurst or a Ziff Davis you've got an in-
 +
                    house staff. They would have a reception at one of the computer
 +
                    conferences, a big deal.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We used to have a hospitality suite at the hotels in some of these
 +
                    conferences and then we would bring little hunks of cheese that we
 +
                    cut up from home and sneak the bottles of wine up the back stairway
 +
                    and they were having these big things with the giant balls of
 +
                    shrimp.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. It was just an order of magnitude different than what we
 +
                    could do. What happened, really, was that it got to the point where
 +
                    there were only three, really two, serious bidders that were still
 +
                    looking for a magazine and there are still about four magazines,
 +
                    four decent quality magazines, on the market and one was Compute,
 +
                    one was Interface Age. Personal Computing had just sold, there was
 +
                    us, and I forget who the fourth one was. There was four.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            There were more magazines than buyers at this point.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's right. There were a lot more magazines, too, but there were
 +
                    four major players. One of the buyers, I didn't really regard them
 +
                    as serious, and that was Atari. I think they wanted to back into
 +
                    the thing. The two buyers left were CBS, and they had a magazine
 +
                    division at that time, and Ziff Davis and that was it. I said,
 +
                    "Man, I've got to make a deal here." That's what happened.
 +
                    I look back with hindsight. I said the guy, Robert I forget his
 +
                    last name, that owned Compute magazine, he held out. He held out
 +
                    until the end and he said, "I'm better than Interface Age," and he
 +
                    was and whatever the other one was, Family Computing, "I'm better
 +
                    than them." He got a really nice payoff from CBS because it was the
 +
                    last one and they wanted him. I don't know. If I had held off a
 +
                    little more would I have gotten more? Probably.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            How much did you get?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Can we publish this figure?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I don't know. I don't think we ever have.
 +
 
 +
  David:            No, we never have.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It's my chance for a scoop.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Pardon?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It's my chance for a scoop.
 +
 
 +
  David:            [laughs] I'd rather not say. I can tell you Compute, if you ever
 +
                    read that number, which you will, it was seven times that much. It
 +
                    was huge. Huge. At that point, I think CBS just said we've got to
 +
                    get into this. We've really got to do something. The big loser was
 +
                    Bob Jones at Interface Age. He had a good magazine. That was a
 +
                    good, solid magazine. Bob Jones, he went to shows, he was always in
 +
                    a suit and tie. He would have fit into the corporate environment
 +
                    very well but he held out too long. I think he was holding out for
 +
                    even more.
 +
                    That's what I was afraid of. Less than a year later he was out of
 +
                    business. There was no way you could compete with these big guys.
 +
                    Ziff instantly started having these receptions at PC expos.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            They had ad reps all over the country.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Ad reps, yeah. Oh my gosh. We would not have survived.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Again, you [inaudible 00:41:03] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. Not exactly right but yes. Wasn't bad. Wasn't bad.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            But Ziff didn't have it for very long before they let it go. It was
 +
                    only a couple of years.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was almost four years. Three and a half years. They did a study,
 +
                    and this is one of the classics. I've been making a presentation at
 +
                    Leslie Park last year on the 10 biggest blunders in personal
 +
                    computing, and actually it's up to 12 now. One was, and I still
 +
                    feel that it was huge, is that Ziff Davis analyzed that market in
 +
                    '85 and determined that the home market, the market for home
 +
                    computers, had reached saturation. Five percent of the homes have a
 +
                    computer. That's it.
 +
                    There were three things, three major conclusions from their survey.
 +
                    I think probably one and a half of them were pretty good and one
 +
                    and a half were just absolutely wrong. The home market reaching
 +
                    saturation, wrong. The second one was that they said that the
 +
                    magazines that would be successful would be those that were focused
 +
                    on specific brands of computers. Are you getting all that?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  David:            With the IBM PC it really brought standardization to the industry.
 +
                    Their analysis was that Apple and PC were going to be the dominant
 +
                    players in the future and in that they were right. They said we've
 +
                    got to have a magazine that's just focused on those two and they
 +
                    did. What was their Apple magazine? They had two Apple magazines.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            A+.
 +
 
 +
  David:            But they also had the one for the Mac.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Mac User.
 +
 
 +
  David:            They had two Apple magazines and then PC. PC they spun off a whole
 +
                    bunch. PC Week.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            PC Junior.
 +
 
 +
  David:            A bunch of them. In any event, they were right in that. The other
 +
                    one that they were semi-right, in the long term future they were
 +
                    totally wrong but in the short term future they were probably
 +
                    right, and that they looked at...We had been covering bulletin
 +
                    board systems. CompuServe, whatever its predecessor was, basically
 +
                    online type of stuff.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Genie.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yes. They said that's just a flash in a pan, online stuff. Well, in
 +
                    '85 it was. It took a while. It took another 8 to 10 years for that
 +
                    but then oh my God. You know what's happened today. If they had
 +
                    stuck with Creative Computing and rather than trying to make it a
 +
                    small business focused magazine but kept the home and the online
 +
                    focus we would have owned the Internet market today, absolutely
 +
                    owned it. It would have been a bigger magazine than all the others
 +
                    put together. Hindsight is 20/20.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I know it wasn't your choice but do you have regret about that?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            At the time it was devastating.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Absolutely.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was like someone killing your child.
 +
 
 +
  David:            At the time, we sat in these meetings up in Stanford, Connecticut,
 +
                    of all places. The reason for that is Bill Ziff. What happened in
 +
                    the interim a year or two after they purchased Creative Computing
 +
                    and PC, Bill Ziff came down with cancer really big time and was
 +
                    afraid of dying next year. So he was moving all of his resources
 +
                    and the holdings outside of New York to avoid really major
 +
                    taxation. I'm not sure that Connecticut was much better but he was
 +
                    splitting them between Connecticut and Florida. Anyway, we wound up
 +
                    having a bunch of meetings.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He was trying to maintain residence in Connecticut.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, I guess that was it.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He was living in the Crown Plaza.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I remember the last one. We were up at the hotel.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Crown Plaza. It was Stanford, it wasn't Harvard.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, Stanford.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I said Harvard.
 +
 
 +
  David:            When they finally came and said we're going to shut this down. That
 +
                    was a devastating time. We probably could have continued to work
 +
                    for Ziff if we had been willing to go into New York but when you
 +
                    get used to working a mile or two from where you live the idea of
 +
                    commuting into New York, who knows what the job would have been.
 +
                    Bye. That was it. That was, in retrospect, a mistake.
 +
                    The other thing that happened as a result of Bill Ziff having this
 +
                    bout with cancer is that Ziff Davis sold off all of their other
 +
                    special interest magazines. Popular Boating, Popular Photography.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yachting, Modern Bride.
 +
 
 +
  David:            They had a big group of travel magazines. Actually, one of the
 +
                    things they did after Creative Computing was to shut down...we got
 +
                    friendly with the publisher and some of the people in the traveling
 +
                    division and we started doing some freelance travel writing.
 +
                    I was writing a monthly column for one of the travel magazines that
 +
                    went to travel agents on automating your travel office and so on,
 +
                    which was an interesting thing because there's a small business
 +
                    that really depended upon computers with the reservation systems
 +
                    and all the airlines had a different reservation system. You had to
 +
                    have Saber.
 +
 
 +
                    A lot of them would go with one and make an agreement with somebody
 +
                    else to make their other reservations. In any event, it was a bad
 +
                    system and I was writing a column on how to make this work for you.
 +
                    As you know, I don't know how many months later we got into the
 +
                    Atari camp.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That was your next gig?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. It was Joe Sugarman, remember, that hooked us up with Atari.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I thought it was Neil Harris.
 +
 
 +
  David:            He was the one we worked with but it was Sugarman.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Because he came from Commodore. I didn't know it was Joe Sugarman.
 +
 
 +
  David:            He ran a company called JS&A for Joe Sugarman and Associates. They
 +
                    were the first one that took these full page ads in lots of
 +
                    different magazines and the quarter page...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            The first advertorials.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, advertorial. The first print advertorials. Really serious
 +
                    stuff. Out of that, he spawned at least a dozen other companies.
 +
                    Sharper Image is a Sugarman and it's a spinoff. They've got a whole
 +
                    page just focused on this air ionizer or some crazy product, but he
 +
                    sold tons of that stuff. Then he started offering courses. He was
 +
                    on the verge of doing some big deal with Atari and so he knew all
 +
                    the people out there.
 +
                    I had taken his course and started running the ad. In fact, there's
 +
                    probably one in one of those issues that is basically a Sugarman
 +
                    ad. And so anyway, you took the course, too. So we got to know him.
 +
                    He got to know us, and we kept up. And, oh, OK. Creative Computing
 +
                    has folded, and I'm trying to get something going with Atari and
 +
                    getting their magazine really serious. And so he was the one that
 +
                    hooked us up with them. By the way, I'm surprised that you don't
 +
                    have Atari Explorer on your website
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            On the website? Well, the deal with my Atari magazines website is
 +
                    I've always strove to get permission. Atari can't be owned by the
 +
                    same company for more than three months at time.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It's hard to get permission that way.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You can't get permission. But it's out there, elsewhere. There are
 +
                    other archivists who don't bother to get permission. That's another
 +
                    good way to do things. Yeah, it's out there. I think Archive.org
 +
                    has it.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Really? Yeah, because I hadn't seen it. I was looking for
 +
                    something...I still get inquires every once in a while from
 +
                    somebody that wants something in one of the previous magazines that
 +
                    we've published.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That's why I don't' risk it. There's a few magazine that I just
 +
                    absolutely would not, because it's owned by some giant monolith
 +
                    corporation now, and they need to hold on everything even if it's
 +
                    30 years old.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Because someday they might be able to make money from it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Right. That's why that's not there.
 +
                    Talk to me about...You did some weird stuff. The weird stuff I'm
 +
                    thinking of is the board game.
 +
 
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            "Computer Rage."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yes.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We just saw that. We might not have even remembered what it was it,
 +
                    but we saw it last night at the museum.
 +
 
 +
  David:            They have one in the Collection's area of the Computer Museum. They
 +
                    didn't even know that we published it. I thought, "Look at this."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You did Computer Rage, which was weird; I want to ask you about
 +
                    that. You did the record album.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            The record album made way more sense than the game.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, well it was a guy named Allan. He was a colonel at that time
 +
                    and he came to see me with the idea for the computer game.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I forgot about that.
 +
 
 +
  David:            He was a colonel in the Army and had something to do with
 +
                    educational programs. The Army said people should know more about
 +
                    how computers work and everything else. He said, "The games that
 +
                    are on the market are pretty tacky and not fun. I've devised
 +
                    something." We worked together with him. We finally decided, "All
 +
                    right. We'll publish this game. By the way, he's a general and
 +
                    finally retired.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            But he's not financing his retirement with [inaudible 00:54:29] .
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            No, not at all.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Will anyone buy this?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, absolutely.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We did overprint.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It wasn't a big seller or big success, but we sold enough of them.
 +
                    Now the record was a little different. There was a guy named Dick
 +
                    Moberg who, at the time, was the president of the Philadelphia Area
 +
                    Computer Society. The first two personal computer festivals were
 +
                    actually in New Jersey, not the west coast. The West Coast Computer
 +
                    Faire came later with Jim Warren and that group. John Dilks started
 +
                    this computer festival in Atlantic City. This was before Atlantic
 +
                    City was a big casino place, but...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Well, it was a casino place, but...
 +
 
 +
  David:            ...but it was pretty tacky.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It still is.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Not like now.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Not like now where it's so classy.
 +
 
 +
  David:            In any event, they were having some issues with the hotel and the
 +
                    convention center in Atlantic City. Dick Moberg said, "We people in
 +
                    Philadelphia can do a better job than you guys in New Jersey." And
 +
                    he got together with what was his name? Lenny? And
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Oh! Saul Levis.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Saul Levis, who was the president of the New Jersey amateur
 +
                    computer group. The two of them got together and said yeah, it'll
 +
                    be more convenient if we do a thing in Philadelphia. And Saul
 +
                    Levis, he had put together the first Trenton computer festival. It
 +
                    wasn't a big huge thing; it's gotten to be gigantic. In any event
 +
                    they said OK, we'll do this. At that point, this was '78; the Apple
 +
                    had just come out and people were making little plug-in
 +
                    peripherals.
 +
                    There was a company that...I'm not going to be able to remember who
 +
                    it was. They made a nice little plug-in board for the Apple. What
 +
                    they had was a very nice thing on the screen where you could
 +
                    position notes and then have them played back. So it was a visual
 +
                    programming of music.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Music Construction Center?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            There were ads for it in magazines.
 +
 
 +
  David:            No, it was a guy out of Denver. I don't remember. Anyway, before
 +
                    that everything had appeared line by line. But there were some
 +
                    reasonable playback systems that were starting to come on the
 +
                    market for the S-100 bus. There were about four of them. The
 +
                    programming was a little bit harrier, but nonetheless they sounded
 +
                    OK. And then there was still the leftovers in a sense that people
 +
                    that were doing work on mainframes to process music.
 +
                    So Dick Moberg said, "Wouldn't it be cool if we could get a number
 +
                    of these together?" And of course there's the Philadelphia
 +
                    Orchestra, we'll make it a Philadelphia Computer Music Festival! So
 +
                    it was largely his idea, but then, how do you publicize it? Well,
 +
                    you've got this magazine that's in your backyard, that was willing
 +
                    to recruit some people and publicize it. So we got about...I don't
 +
                    know at the festival there were probably 25 or 30 people that had
 +
                    stuff.
 +
 
 +
                    They recorded it all, which in retrospect was a bit of a mistake
 +
                    because they had problems with one of the two channels in the
 +
                    stereo. They had the big reel-to-reel tape recorder, one of the
 +
                    channels was seriously too low. And then they said, "Well, we've
 +
                    got this wonderful tape; what are we going to do with it?" And I
 +
                    said, "Well, I'll do something with it."
 +
 
 +
                    I hooked up with a studio in the city that made records, and we
 +
                    went in there and corrected the low channel a little bit, not
 +
                    totally, but enough that it sounded like stereo. And put together a
 +
                    vinyl record!
 +
 
 +
                    I edited out a lot of the poor quality performances, made the
 +
                    record, and that sold! It sold pretty well. Our biggest problem was
 +
                    shipping. How do you ship a 12-inch vinyl record without it
 +
                    breaking? But that sold pretty well. That, of course, died off
 +
                    along with everything else when Creative Computing got killed by
 +
                    Ziff. But, I still had the original test pressing of that, the
 +
                    original, original.
 +
 
 +
                    I played it back, and it sounded very good. Put it into, I forget
 +
                    what the software was, but, it was one, the digital routine. It
 +
                    would have been nice if I still had the original tape, but, I
 +
                    didn't. But, OK, it's got a little bit of deterioration, going to a
 +
                    record.
 +
 
 +
                    On the other hand, we're not talking about losing overtones of a
 +
                    violin up at 15,000 hertz. It was within a narrow band, to begin
 +
                    with, in any event. But that did let me totally correct the left
 +
                    channel and bring it up to what it should be. I put that out. I'm
 +
                    selling CDs now, of that.
 +
 
 +
                    In fact, a guy from Australia ordered one, and obviously, the
 +
                    postage to send anything overseas is a lot more. He said, "Why
 +
                    don't you just make MP3 files out of it?" Because, they're WAV
 +
                    files, the way they are now. I go, "OK."
 +
 
 +
                    This is very recent, like within the last couple of weeks, I
 +
                    downloaded some software, "Convert WAV to MP3," converted it, sent
 +
                    them the files. They said, "That's great." What I think what I'll
 +
                    probably do is try to figure out how I can make them available from
 +
                    a website.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You've apparently forgotten that, like, 10 years ago, I did that.
 +
                    They're there.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yes. I know.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            They're at vintagecomputermusic.com.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Are they MP3s?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, then, I don't have to do it.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You dummy.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Bam. I did remember. I didn't know that you did them all. I thought
 +
                    you did a sample.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            No. They're all there. I can see you're getting reflux.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Boom. I wasted a little time. I waste a lot of time, these days.
 +
                    That was a cool thing.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I just think it was neat that you guys were willing to take chances
 +
                    with weird stuff.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Where we took chances with really weird stuff was in the software.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Software publishing?
 +
 
 +
  David:            We had a brand called, Sensational Software. Unfortunately, Ziff
 +
                    decided it was competing with some potential advertisers, which it
 +
                    was, in a sense. They killed it off. But, we had some really good
 +
                    stuff. We had the Apple game, what the heck was it? It was ported
 +
                    directly over from the arcade games.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Was it, "Space Invaders"?
 +
 
 +
  David:            "Space Invaders."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It was a clone of, "Space Invaders"?
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was the real.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You got it from, Jeff Lee's guy.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Because, "Space Invaders," the Japanese game, was one of the first
 +
                    full-sized console video games where they used a general-purpose
 +
                    chip. "Space Invaders," was programmed for the 6502, Apple.
 +
                    We bought it from this Japanese company, and we had the only real
 +
                    "Space Invaders" game. That was one, and a couple of others that we
 +
                    really could have gone places with. That was just about the time
 +
                    that Ziff came in and said, "Nah, you can't have this anymore."
 +
 
 +
                    They were into printed media, so, they kept the books going, but,
 +
                    not any of the other stuff. The other thing we had, was, speaking
 +
                    of computer music, a little division, that probably could have
 +
                    gotten a lot bigger, called Peripherals Plus. We were marketing a
 +
                    little computer music board, it was an S-100 bus once. But if we
 +
                    had then...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Didn't we have a plotter, too?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yep. We had about five or six interesting, low-level products. But,
 +
                    again, Ziff.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That stuff was really competing with the advertisers.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. Obviously, that wasn't our intent. But, yes it was. We also
 +
                    offered courses at that time. Do you remember, at County College?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I don't.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was just at when we moved into the new building at Hanover. We
 +
                    had two people that were doing that.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            One of them was that crazy, Larry guy. He was seriously weird.
 +
 
 +
  David:            County College of Morris, we reached an agreement that we would
 +
                    teach their Introductory Computer course. Not for their day
 +
                    students, but they offered evening courses, adult education, we
 +
                    were doing that. Fingers in a lot of pies, at that point.
 +
                    Actually, from that standpoint, it was, probably, good that Ziff
 +
                    got us a little bit more focused, and back to the roots of
 +
                    publishing. Getting spread a little thin.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You went to Atari, got the Atari game, and you did the "Atari
 +
                    Explorer," right?
 +
 
 +
  David:            "Atari Explorer." They had had an occasional publication, not
 +
                    really a magazine, but one that was focused on the games, and they
 +
                    decided that they could start that one up again. It started up with
 +
                    a new name. We called it, "Atarian." It was focused, basically, on
 +
                    video games. You buy one of their video games and you get an issue.
 +
                    Anyway, there were different ways that they were going to promote
 +
                    it.
 +
                    But, a year later Nintendo just, absolutely, buried "Atarian," in
 +
                    '89. They kept Atari Spore going for, I think, two more issues,
 +
                    right?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Was it two?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I don't remember the details.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It wasn't much.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I remember why they killed it.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Ms. Feisty here. Come on. You've got to tell the story here.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            They were playing games with our printer. Production schedule.
 +
                    Everybody had a production schedule. We never missed our production
 +
                    date, getting things to the printer, getting them mailed. We just
 +
                    did it because that's what you had to do. I will probably get sued
 +
                    for this. Atari started not paying the printer and the printer says
 +
                    we're not going to print this until we get paid. The date kept
 +
                    slipping and slipping and the subscribers would be calling up and
 +
                    saying, "Where's my magazine?"
 +
                    This went on. It was bi-monthly. It went on for maybe six months. I
 +
                    finally wrote an editorial in which I explained to the readers
 +
                    exactly what was going on. They didn't see it until it was printed.
 +
                    [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            That didn't get into the magazine, though.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It did.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's right, it did.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            They never saw it. We were producing it out of [inaudible 01:10:07]
 +
                    New Jersey and printing it in eastern Pennsylvania and they never
 +
                    saw it until it was too late. My tenure was cut short but I didn't
 +
                    really care at that point. I was sick of them. It was really hard.
 +
                    They're not easy people to deal with, even when the owners last for
 +
                    more than three months. That was my suicide by editorial. The only
 +
                    time in my life I've ever been fired.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I didn't realize they didn't read that beforehand but I should
 +
                    have. I should have.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [laughs] I probably wouldn't have gotten fired if they had.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was the straw that broke the camera's back.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            But then John [inaudible 01:11:05] kept doing it a little bit.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I know. In a lot of cases, particularly with the games magazine,
 +
                    they wanted to approve everything that went in it. If you do an
 +
                    objective product review, you call it like it is. Oh m gosh, there
 +
                    was one, it wasn't just one product but a roundup after Consumer
 +
                    Electronics' show, and I don't remember what it was. Atari had
 +
                    brought out some new products that really weren't ready to go.
 +
                    In some cases I just said, "I'm not going to say anything about
 +
                    this one or these two or three. I'll focus on the ones that are
 +
                    ready to go or are in good shape." Oh my gosh. "What about this?
 +
                    This is a wonderful thing." "Well, maybe it will be but it isn't
 +
                    yet." We had issues all along on censorship and them changing what
 +
                    we had written and everything. As Betsy said, they were not nice
 +
                    people to work with. I forget, the two brothers.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Trummel.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Trummel, yeah. That came from Commodore.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Jack and somebody else. Jack and his brother.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was interesting because yesterday I saw Nolan Bushnell. He was
 +
                    at that event. Nolan was flamboyant, but basically he had integrity
 +
                    and he was an honest guy. Man, oh man. Didn't stay and the
 +
                    corporation changed after he left.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Then you're done with Atari and then it's straight to military
 +
                    vehicles there?
 +
 
 +
  David:            [laughs] No.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            There was a hiatus.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, man. We published magazines, in-house magazines, for a couple
 +
                    other organizations. Did one for Nabisco called...I don't even
 +
                    remember but it was for their marketing department. Published that
 +
                    for some period of time and then they decided to bring it in-house.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was more like a newsletter.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was 16 pages. It was getting there.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            16 pages is a newsletter.
 +
 
 +
  David:            All right. Magazine format. Let's put it that way. We did some
 +
                    fulfillment. Basically, a lot of freelance writing on the travel
 +
                    field.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Stuffed dogs. The stuffed dogs. Remember those four dogs for my
 +
                    brother?
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's fulfillment. Fulfillment for Con Edison. I published a
 +
                    couple newsletters for a while, one called "Effective Investing"
 +
                    and one called "Effective Communication" for writers. We're talking
 +
                    early '90s.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That was when people still cared, thought that there might be a
 +
                    correct way to do something and they wanted to know what it was.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was focused on "Take this computer and start to use it as a
 +
                    tool. Don't be afraid of the thing." '91/'92 not everybody was
 +
                    using a computer yet or a personal computer. That was the
 +
                    orientation of that. Then the other thing we got into big time was
 +
                    we'd been involved with a local rescue mission for men with drug,
 +
                    alcohol, homeless issues and we were writing and producing their
 +
                    newsletter.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We were producing all of their fundraising material.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We started, I think, with the newsletter.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No, we did everything. Appeal letters and newsletters and
 +
                    maintaining their database, the donor database. It took a lot of
 +
                    time.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We did that for five years. Then '96 I got an opportunity to buy
 +
                    this crazy military vehicles magazine for people that were
 +
                    restoring old historic military vehicles. It was a magazine but it
 +
                    was I guess more of a glorified newsletter.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was horrible.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was horrible but it was really terrible. In fact, the editor or
 +
                    the publisher, whatever, the owner, he'd take the articles however
 +
                    the writer would send them. If it was double spaced type, boom,
 +
                    that's what would appear in the magazine.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Save all the typesetting.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He had zero typesetting expense.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Zero editing. He just took anything that came in, put it in. Ads
 +
                    the same way. Half the ads were hand written. Well, not half, but a
 +
                    significant number had corrections on them by hand. Oh my gosh. It
 +
                    was so terrible. I made it into a real magazine and built it up. At
 +
                    that point the circulation had been about 10,000. We built it up
 +
                    and we were pushing close to 20,000 magazines. It was a real
 +
                    magazine. I sold it to Crowsey publications.
 +
                    Then they, which I did not realize at the time, the owner, Chet
 +
                    Crowsey, had put the whole company up for sale and he sold the
 +
                    company a year or two later to some other specialty magazine
 +
                    publisher. We're talking narrow, narrow niche. They published a lot
 +
                    of, what'd they call it, white tail bow hunting. Really, really
 +
                    narrow stuff. Up in northern Wisconsin is where they were based. In
 +
                    any event, he sold it.
 +
 
 +
                    The new publishers, their whole stick was making money. They
 +
                    immediately raised the subscription price of military vehicles. We
 +
                    were charging $18 a year which was fine and they raised it to
 +
                    $21.95 or something and they raised the advertising rates and
 +
                    everything else.
 +
 
 +
                    The last I knew, the circulation was back down around 10,000.
 +
                    [laughs] It doesn't pay off to take that approach. I didn't have
 +
                    the same emotional connection, with that as I did with Creative
 +
                    Computing and the other magazines there. Fine, you do what you want
 +
                    with the magazine, it's OK.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You didn't care too much?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Nah.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            What do you guys do now? It seems like charity work and [inaudible
 +
                    01:19:45] ?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah. I run a non-profit called Beyond the Walls and he runs his
 +
                    website and does Bible studies.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Right. Actually, Betsy, the organization she has, she's executive
 +
                    director of Beyond the Wall, that's gotten huge.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It's getting bigger and bigger.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It's gotten huge.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I think huge is probably an exaggeration.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, not huge like a Gates Foundation thing.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I wish. We started in 2005 with 26 volunteers going to Guatemala to
 +
                    work with this organization that works with the people who scavenge
 +
                    in the Guatemala City garbage dump. The dump is in a ravine. It
 +
                    started in the early '50s and as it has filled up around the edges
 +
                    they put a couple layers of sand on it and let it sit for a bit and
 +
                    then the people build houses on it out of scraps and things that
 +
                    they made.
 +
                    This organization called Potter's House that we work with has been
 +
                    working with them for 26 years. They have an education program,
 +
                    micro-enterprise and health and various things that they do. Since
 +
                    2005 we've been sending volunteer teams. We're not the only ones
 +
                    sending volunteer teams down there to build houses and do
 +
                    healthcare and do stuff with the kids. So we started with 26 and by
 +
                    the end of the year we'll be well over 150 volunteers. We'll have
 +
                    three weeks this summer, I'll have 135 over three weeks this
 +
                    summer.
 +
 
 +
                    It started in our backyard and one of the reasons that we wanted
 +
                    to...It started in the church and we started the organization
 +
                    partially because it's easier to raise money if you're not a church
 +
                    and it's also easier to make the volunteer opportunities available
 +
                    to people. If you say "Oh I'm going to Guatemala." "Oh I'd love to
 +
                    go with you! Who's going?" "It's my church." "Oh."
 +
 
 +
                    But, if it's this local non-profit it's more appealing and we've
 +
                    really succeeded in doing that because we have people not only from
 +
                    in our own community, but this year we're going to have a family
 +
                    from Oklahoma, about six families from Texas, several people from
 +
                    Florida.
 +
 
 +
  David:            You got the Virginia.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Virginia. It's like oh my goodness. How is this happening?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            And everyone goes out to Guatemala and does the [inaudible
 +
                    01:22:31] ?
 +
                    [cross talk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah. We all meet in Guatemala. I have three teams. One each week,
 +
                    and I'll be there the whole time and they'll come down and probably
 +
                    each team will build two or three houses. They'll do medical
 +
                    clinic, they'll do day camp for kids, soccer or baseball, sports
 +
                    things.
 +
                    They were about teenagers, so they love to do the...Everybody does
 +
                    construction in the morning. Then, in the afternoon teenage girls
 +
                    and some of the boys who want to do other stuff will help out with
 +
                    these other kid-related activities. That's what I'm doing.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            My wife is in Africa this week and last doing something similar.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Cool.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Which is why I have to leave shortly to go get my kids.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            What part of Africa is she in?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            She did some stuff for Special Olympics. Then, they were helping
 +
                    build something at a food bank. I don't know that much yet, because
 +
                    she's not home yet.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Cool.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's terrific. She'll be changed.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            She keeps telling that she wished I could've come, and I do, too.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You have this kid. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            We've got the two kids. The six-year-old doesn't feed herself real
 +
                    well.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            She can't drive to school.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Your annual budget has gone from 0 to what? Are you going to hit
 +
                    about 150, 200,000 this year?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It's over 300 already.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, OK. [laughs] 300.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It's small potatoes compared to...
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            As my boss, the Chairman of the Board, and I'm the only employee,
 +
                    is fond of saying, "The people out there don't realize that we're
 +
                    just a bunch of schlumps sitting around a table making this stuff
 +
                    up as we go along. Very good leadership. He's a very good leader.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We were trying to maybe see if we can touch base with the Gates
 +
                    Foundation when we were up there. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We got a brochure into his hands.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, we got a brochure into his hands and some other stuff.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Was Bill Gates there?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, yeah. I had a picture of him that I had taken at the first
 +
                    Altair convention in 1976, before he had actually made the deal
 +
                    with Altair to develop BASIC. He had said, "I can do it," but they
 +
                    hadn't signed the whole thing. I've got a picture of him as a 20-
 +
                    year-old or thereabouts, talking at this little convention.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You showed it to him?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. I gave him a copy. The problem I had is that...some people
 +
                    keep everything. I pretty much give everything away.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Oh, you are lying. You keep everything.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I do keep a lot of stuff. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Then, you give it away later. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. Well, when Stan Freiberger was putting together the "Fire in
 +
                    the Valley" book, I gave him a lot of photographs and I gave him
 +
                    the originals. Then the publisher said, "It's not good enough. The
 +
                    photo. You get the negative." OK, they're gone. Never any of that
 +
                    came back. In fact, what I had to do is scan the photo from the
 +
                    book to make the print to give to Bill.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Photos of being young and cute.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That was his Woody Allen phase. He looked exactly like Woody Allen
 +
                    did at that phase in his life.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [inaudible 01:26:30] too.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I'm sure there is.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It is a lot [inaudible 01:26:33] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            She improves with age. Every year.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I saw the picture! You look the same.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Anyway, the instant Paul Allen showed up, of course, everybody's
 +
                    mingling around this museum. All of a sudden there was like an
 +
                    arrow head over in that direction.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            There was this sucking sound.
 +
 
 +
  David:            And then Bill shows up and, oh my God, everybody has to go see
 +
                    Bill.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I was talking to Bob Rynett this morning, the guy who organized it,
 +
                    and he said, "Oh, Paul was very happy. Paul was very pleased with
 +
                    the way the event went." He said his only regret was that he and
 +
                    Bill didn't have enough time to spend with the people. And I'm
 +
                    thinking, "Well, OK, if you just stayed a little longer."
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, at least Paul Allen did come to the dinner.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, he stayed a little longer, but Bill, he was in and out like
 +
                    a...
 +
 
 +
  David:            Bill was there for maybe an hour.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            He just showed up because he had to.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, exactly. It was a cameo.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [inaudible 01:27:52] cameo there?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Oh, yes. There I am. I was thinner then. Oh! There's Ted in his
 +
                    hat! And Peter [inaudible 01:28:02] . Who's that guy?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Dick Heiser was at the convention and he had one of the hats. The
 +
                    Xanadu hat.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He was wearing one of those hats. The rings were actually silver.
 +
                    Oh and there's Johnny Anderson. He's the one that wrote that
 +
                    crazy...
 +
 
 +
                    This was our building.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was the greenhouse garage building that we started. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            And there was a hole. Was it you or my brother that made a hole in
 +
                    the wall for an air conditioner?
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was your brother.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            And the building was painted white after...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Is that the air conditioner? You comment about the low tech air
 +
                    conditioning.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No, that was in an actual window. This building had been painted
 +
                    white after and right about here a hole had been made in the wall
 +
                    for this through-the-wall air conditioner. It was rented and when
 +
                    we moved out, we had this hole in the wall. So, my brother takes
 +
                    this spare ceiling panel that we had. It was white and sort of
 +
                    stuffed it in the hole and filled it up so that it really didn't
 +
                    show any more. We never heard any more about it.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That building today is...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            They've made it very fancy.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh my gosh! It's a boutique shop and it's really nice. And they
 +
                    didn't even tear it down. It wasn't a tear-down and rebuild. At any
 +
                    event, we were not into spending money on facilities. Absolutely
 +
                    not. The last place that we were in was a printing company had
 +
                    owned it and they had taken three very small houses that backed up
 +
                    to railroad tracks and then they built a large warehouse at the end
 +
                    that was relatively modern. Then they just connected the three
 +
                    houses with little walkway and so we were in the first house.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You couldn't tell that it was two houses.
 +
 
 +
  David:            No. The art department was in the second, then the software group
 +
                    was in the third one. We had our fulfillment and storage and stuff
 +
                    in the warehouse.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            How much money did you spend on the facility?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Not much.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We were spending money on expansion, growing, grow, grow. Then Ziff
 +
                    Davis comes in, they say, "You got this wonderful warehouse."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It's our warehouse now, right?
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's right.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It wasn't though, because you owned it.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I know, but in any event, they said we're going to use it. We're
 +
                    moving some of your operation, advertising, sales into New York,
 +
                    therefore you will have more space. It wasn't the trade-off of the
 +
                    same kind of space or anything. What they did is, they have all
 +
                    these other magazines at that point, things like "Popular Boating"
 +
                    and "Yachting" and everything else. All of those magazines, when
 +
                    you subscribed you got a premium. You got a tote bag or something.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            A backpack or a cushion.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. They moved all of their premium fulfillment out to our
 +
                    warehouse. They said, "Because you're not going to have a software
 +
                    department anymore, so you won't have to ship any software. We're
 +
                    going to bring all of our premiums out there." We still have
 +
                    "Yachting" bags.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yachting bags and seat bags.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Speaking of fulfillment that was something that we did. We were
 +
                    real pioneers in doing our own fulfillment.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's true...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            All magazines then used fulfillment houses. You would just send all
 +
                    the little cards and white mail and everything to your fulfillment
 +
                    house and they would just take care, enter it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Reader service cards and...
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Exactly, and then they would send the labels.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Everything went either to Boulder, Colorado, Des Moines, Iowa, or
 +
                    some place in Florida.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So when you say pioneers, does that mean you were cheap?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Well no, because we were not getting good service, we weren't happy
 +
                    with the service the readers were getting. And so we decided to
 +
                    bring it in it house, and we brought a program from a company in
 +
                    Boston that had written a program to run a PDP11.
 +
                    And we did we brought the whole thing in-house. We had our own data
 +
                    entry people. Did all the caging, taking the money out in-house.
 +
                    Printed our own labels and ship, because then you had to print them
 +
                    and ship them because there was no electronic delivery.
 +
 
 +
  David:            You know we were real pioneers there and we did spent some money.
 +
                    Because PDP1170 was not a low-end, with a platter and disk, 12
 +
                    inch, maybe 15 inch, but a big, big platter drive, and data entry
 +
                    terminals, deck writers, BTO5. And when Ziff came in, I mean they
 +
                    were blown away that we were doing our own fulfillment, and doing a
 +
                    very efficiently.
 +
                    And the other thing we were doing also was the reader service
 +
                    cards. We were doing all our own processing of that. The same
 +
                    computer is same system. A Mini Data System, that's what it was.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No.
 +
 
 +
  David:            No? OK.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Mini data was the one you were using...
 +
 
 +
[Day 2]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
  David:            A couple of the questions you asked yesterday got us to thinking
 +
                    about things we probably should have mentioned or clarified.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            OK let's go, let me grab a pen.
 +
 
 +
  David:            One of the corrections, Betsy remembered better than I. the
 +
                    embezzlement that we were talking about was actually 79 not 78 it
 +
                    doesn't make a lot of difference but was a year later. It was a
 +
                    year after I had left my day job, and I was really depending upon
 +
                    Creative Computing for my income and everything else. So to lose
 +
                    that was a big blow at that time.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So that could have been the end of things right there?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yes absolutely it could have.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was 79 not 78, is what you're saying.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's what I said it was 79 not 78.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I was going to ask you to move closer to the microphone.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Actually I don't have to do this. My ego is completely uninvolved.
 +
                    I would go sit and play with the cats.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Please, please be here. You supplement Dave's memory.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yes exactly she's very good at that.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I want to know, how are you going to know how to spell things? He
 +
                    used the name John Dilks. If you go to write it out, how do you
 +
                    know how to spell John Dilks?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I'll either Google it, and if it's not in Wikipedia, I'll have to
 +
                    come back to you and ask, or if they're mentioned in the magazines.
 +
                    I'll do my best.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I'm not saying it in a critical way, I'm just impressed that you
 +
                    don't ask.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I just feel this way, I can have everything. I don't have to write
 +
                    it down. I can concentrate on the conversation, rather than taking
 +
                    notes.
 +
 
 +
  David:            OK. One thing I thought would be kind of worthwhile...putting the
 +
                    whole era of the early computer magazines into a perspective. In a
 +
                    sense, personal computing itself went through several eras as it
 +
                    accelerated and became so widespread. It certainly didn't start
 +
                    that way.
 +
                    You almost have to look at a period before there were personal
 +
                    computers -- the pre-personal computer era, which I would say would
 +
                    be 1972 or so up through '75, when the first computers came out.
 +
                    What was happening then was you had big time-sharing systems.
 +
 
 +
                    Then, manufacturers like DEC and HP were making smaller time-
 +
                    sharing systems for terminals on a computer. Specifically, Bob
 +
                    Albrecht opened up People's Computer Company down in San Carlos,
 +
                    San Mateo, one of the "Sans." It was an open to the public place.
 +
                    What were people going to do with computers? Well, he wrote this
 +
                    book of what to do after you hit return, of games.
 +
 
 +
                    Then I wrote my book, not for his center, but for people in the
 +
                    east that had access to the same type of things on DEC computers.
 +
                    Those two books actually came out in '72. That was well
 +
                    before....There was an impetus for people to use computers. Even
 +
                    though it was mini-computers and they didn't really have their own,
 +
                    they did have access.
 +
 
 +
                    That, I think, was an important thing because, then, when the kit
 +
                    computers first came out, which is '75, we really had the kit
 +
                    computer era from '75 to around '78. That's when it primary was,
 +
                    the do-it-yourself, build-it-yourself.
 +
 
 +
                    Who did those computers appeal to? It was largely people who were
 +
                    OK with things like soldering guns. That was largely HAM radio
 +
                    people. You look at "73" magazine and "Radio Electronics," those
 +
                    were the ones that dragged the hardware people into the field, and
 +
                    "Popular Electronics," of course, with the Altair in January, '75.
 +
 
 +
                    You had to know something about, and be a little bit capable with
 +
                    your hands to get into it. That continued but dwindled off by 1980,
 +
                    because of course, in '78, you had the three biggies, not biggies,
 +
                    but self-contained, assembled computers: the Commodore PET, TRS-80,
 +
                    and the Apple all came out in '78. They were proprietary platforms,
 +
                    nobody was sharing stuff.
 +
 
 +
                    Actually, the S-100 bus was more shareable. More people got a card
 +
                    that you could plug into the S-100 bus. There was more, but on the
 +
                    other hand, you had to build it. That was really a stumbling block
 +
                    for a lot of people. Then processor technology with the SAL. OK,
 +
                    here's an S-100 bus machine, but it's all built. That was a big
 +
                    leap.
 +
 
 +
                    Anyway, you had the, what I call, proprietary era from '78 to '82.
 +
                    Then it kind of dwindled off, although Apple certainly kept going.
 +
                    When the IBM PC came out, '81, '82, '83, that ushered in the
 +
                    standardization era. Everybody, "OK, we're going to make an IBM PC
 +
                    clone." It was really only Apple, and to a lesser extent, the Atari
 +
                    and the Commodore that kept going with their own proprietary stuff.
 +
                    They really couldn't keep going.
 +
 
 +
                    At that time, we started working with Atari. They using the same
 +
                    chip that Apple had. I thought, "Man, that's an opportunity. Why
 +
                    don't they just make an agreement with Apple to run Apple software
 +
                    and everything." They got a 6502, that family of chips in there,
 +
                    why not? But that wasn't Atari's way of doing things, as you well
 +
                    know.
 +
 
 +
                    In any event, they went through those stages. As a new one came
 +
                    along, the other one died off. That though then affected the
 +
                    magazines, Creative Computing, we came from the pre-era, in a
 +
                    sense. From the education applications and people having access to
 +
                    small, minicomputer time sharing systems. When Altair basic was
 +
                    announced, then it was the obvious thing that we would port over
 +
                    programs to that.
 +
 
 +
                    Other magazines such as "Byte" and some of the hardware magazines,
 +
                    they really came from the HAM radio end of things. Wayne Green, who
 +
                    started "Byte," was publishing "73," which was the biggest magazine
 +
                    in HAM radio. HAM fests were one of the earliest places where
 +
                    computers were, or at least hardware, do-it-yourself computers were
 +
                    really seen and popularized. Wasn't till a little later that we had
 +
                    computer festivals.
 +
 
 +
                    The real early computer festivals in '75, '76, had a big overlap
 +
                    with Ham radio. The early ones in New Jersey. That was the earliest
 +
                    ones. It was, I think, more, not more, but at least half was
 +
                    oriented to Ham radio. Then, it broadened out, of course, with more
 +
                    applications being reproduced. Anyway, I think it's kind of
 +
                    important to know how things fit into that whole scheme of things.
 +
 
 +
                    Magazines either came from the Ham radio and hardware side of
 +
                    things. They had a different perspective than those like Creative
 +
                    Computing.
 +
 
 +
                    Well, Peoples' Computer Company, Bob Aldberg, could have had a real
 +
                    winning magazine, but he was too much in the alternative mode. So,
 +
                    Peoples' Computer Company never really made it as a magazine. He
 +
                    didn't want to do advertising or anything that would...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That was a different avenue. It was more like a tabloid-style
 +
                    newspaper.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Newspaper, yes.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It was more glossy.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Exactly.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It was a very different field.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. Again, magazine publishing. I remember, early on, I was on a
 +
                    TV show. McNeil Lehrer Report on Public Broadcasting. Life Magazine
 +
                    was being re-launched and Time-Warner was spending a ton of money
 +
                    on this re-launch. They had the publisher of Life Magazine.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was probably Time-Life back then. I don't think it...
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. That's right. It wasn't Time. Well, I think it was close to
 +
                    the time that they merged. Anyway. Yeah. It was Time-Life. Then,
 +
                    they had me. Sort of the opposite extreme.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You're going to be covered in cat hair by the time you're here.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Oh, I am sure.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I'm sorry.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It's OK. But it matches and sort of goes with it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah. It matches fine.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You have kind of a theme here. The black and white.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yes. Yes. Sorry to interrupt.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Anyway, they were interviewing both of us. They were going to spend
 +
                    more money on their first issue than our entire annual budget, for
 +
                    everything. The difference in big publishers, because we we're
 +
                    talking about that a little bit yesterday, is huge. Really huge.
 +
                    Now, the interesting thing is there was a magazine back then. I
 +
                    don't know if it's still around today, called Folio. It was a
 +
                    magazine for magazine publishers. They covered all aspects of it.
 +
                    Subscription fulfillment, typesetting and everything else and the
 +
                    business aspects of running a magazine.
 +
 
 +
                    They had some figures, which were true for a long period of time.
 +
                    That one out of seven magazine startups makes it for one year. One
 +
                    out of seven. That's low. Of those, one out of seven makes it for
 +
                    five years. So, were talking about...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I think Wayne told me almost the exact same statistic.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. One out of 50 new magazines makes it for five years or more.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Right.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Once you make it five years, you're probably good to go for awhile.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
                    The new Life Magazine comes back, roaring back in. Where are they
 +
                    today, or even 10 years later from that point. Gone. Didn't make
 +
                    it. In any event, yesterday we were talking a little bit about
 +
                    where did we put all our money.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Mm-hmm.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, all our money wasn't an awful lot compared to big publishers.
 +
                    We were a small player. We're big in that field, but...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You're a big fish in a little bowl.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. Yeah. There wasn't a lot. Betsy reminded me this morning that
 +
                    one of the things we did to, in a sense, keep control, is we bought
 +
                    our own typesetting equipment.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Used of course.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Huh?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Used.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Used. Yes. We didn't want to send stuff out to a typesetter
 +
                    where...what did you [inaudible 00:14:22] ?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was the same thing with the fulfillment. You are sending it to a
 +
                    service that gives your work to a minimum wage person who couldn't
 +
                    care less. Puts her time in and...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Plus you still had code and things that needed to be done right.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Done right. Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Otherwise it was useless.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah. We didn't typeset the code usually. We would actually pace
 +
                    down the printouts. Part of it was for efficiency and probably, in
 +
                    the long run, it was cheaper. Just to turn your typesetting around,
 +
                    send it out and wait for your galleys to come back. Then you
 +
                    proofread them. Then you'd send it back. Then they make the
 +
                    corrections maybe and you get it back again. So we said, well...and
 +
                    then we got this used, copy graphic was it?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Mm-hmm. Yep.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Typesetter. Found a young woman who knew typesetting and hired her.
 +
                    We bought our own stat camera. We always used to have to send all
 +
                    the stats and [inaudible 00:15:34] out to be made.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was huge then before...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Had our own darkroom.
 +
 
 +
  David:            ...everything was computerized publishing. Yeah. We had our own
 +
                    darkroom and our own stat camera with the thing that goes over a
 +
                    screen basically to make it into dots.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Right.
 +
 
 +
  David:            To do that. To make those negatives or [inaudible 00:15:56] , which
 +
                    are the positive. That was something again. You sent it out and you
 +
                    get it back.
 +
                    I said, "Oh, you know what, we got a little more type here than
 +
                    expected. We want to crop this. Well, we send it out again, and oh
 +
                    my gosh." Doing all of that in-house, but it cost money. In a
 +
                    sense, just for the hardware and capital improvements that you
 +
                    needed to do that.
 +
 
 +
                    We were spending it on that and expansion into other things like
 +
                    the software. One of the other ones that I was thinking of that we
 +
                    did, that certainly, really didn't bring us any tangible reward,
 +
                    was that we were doing some consulting when we started developing
 +
                    software. We started doing consulting to places like the
 +
                    Exploratorium in San Francisco. And Sesame Place. That was a big
 +
                    one for us.
 +
 
 +
                    Sesame Place was a theme park right in our own backyard in New
 +
                    Jersey. They were going to have these terminals that you could go
 +
                    up to. One of the programs was Mix and Match the Muppets. You could
 +
                    take different parts of Muppets and combine them. We wrote a part
 +
                    of that routine and a whole bunch of stuff that made computers and
 +
                    these things not computers but approachable things for kids.
 +
 
 +
                    We did some work for the Capital Children's Museum in Washington
 +
                    and Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. Again, did it help us?
 +
                    Maybe. Did we gain a little reputation? Maybe. Did it translate to
 +
                    the bottom line? Probably not. As Betsy said, it was fun for you to
 +
                    do that, wasn't it?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, it was fun. It gave him fun things to do.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was one way that we, in a sense, spent some money.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It makes sense. You guys were the computer experts, probably by
 +
                    orders of magnitude. Who are they going to go to?
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's right. Interactive games, yeah. I already had a good selling
 +
                    book out there that was visible, known. We did a lot of that kind
 +
                    of stuff. Some of it was just fun to do. Another place where we put
 +
                    I won't say a lot of money but we went to a lot of these shows,
 +
                    well, there were some that were strictly personal computer shows,
 +
                    but then also tried to push into things like the consumer
 +
                    electronics show.
 +
                    We were the only magazine at the consumer electronics. That's a
 +
                    huge, huge show. Twice a year, one in Chicago and one in Las Vegas.
 +
                    We'd take the smallest booth that you could but, still, it was a
 +
                    fair chunk of change to go to that, but that's how I felt we got
 +
                    the reach. They were pushing at a lower level. That was video games
 +
                    mostly at that point. Although we weren't in that market, I just
 +
                    felt that that was someplace that we wanted to be.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Do you think that was worthwhile?
 +
 
 +
  David:            I don't know. We were mainly looking for retail stores to sell the
 +
                    magazine. That was my main purpose for going there. No, it probably
 +
                    wasn't. It probably was not and it cost us a lot of money to go to
 +
                    the shows. You have to experiment and do those things. We started
 +
                    reporting on new developments at the consumer electronics show and
 +
                    there was some overlap with Computer Inc but it was mostly video
 +
                    games. No, it didn't have a real good payoff. [laughs]
 +
                    Then there was the Boston show we went to where Betsy's feistiness
 +
                    really came out. You go to those shows. I'm not talking about one
 +
                    of these local computer shows or something. You go to a big show.
 +
                    You've got to use union labor. We had a computer at our booth. We
 +
                    wanted to plug it in. You're going to plug in your computer? No,
 +
                    you can't plug it in. You've got to hire an electrician for an hour
 +
                    for $75 to plug in your computer.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That was a bit extreme. I don't think that was actually true.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I don't know how much it was but you had to use union labor for
 +
                    different things. Betsy took exception to that at one show and
 +
                    actually came to blows.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I was carrying stuff off the show floor. We were trying to get out.
 +
                    It was in Boston and we were going to drive back and we were trying
 +
                    to...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Go home at the end of the show?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            ...go home at the end of the show. We were just carrying our
 +
                    cartons of leftover magazines and books and some union guy comes to
 +
                    me and starts telling me you can't do this and he was being very
 +
                    rude. So I punched him in the arm. [laughs] They were not happy.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Did you have to hire a special punching person to do that?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yes, exactly. I should have consulted with the shop steward before
 +
                    doing that.
 +
 
 +
  David:            There was a follow-up to that. I'm not absolutely sure but I think
 +
                    the guy that was running that show was Shelley Adelman. He then
 +
                    approached us after that little incident. You can't do this. Betsy
 +
                    was really in his face about come on. We're a tiny little nit. Sure
 +
                    we can do it. We can carry our own stuff.
 +
                    Shelley Adelman, whose name you probably heard today, in a sense,
 +
                    got his start by running these smaller shows around the country and
 +
                    then he built up to running PC Expo in New York and Las Vegas and
 +
                    then he got into you run a show in Las Vegas you've got to make
 +
                    deals with the hotels and so on.
 +
 
 +
                    The earlier PC shows in Las Vegas did not use the convention
 +
                    center. They were held in I think probably the Hilton. He got to
 +
                    know hotel people there and he started buying into hotels and today
 +
                    Shelley Adelman is huge. Not Caesars but he owns one of the really
 +
                    big casino operations. He's on Forbes list of top 100 wealthiest
 +
                    Americans.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I'm sure he only uses union labor.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I'm sure he does, absolutely. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That's how he got where he is.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We've crossed paths with some interesting people in different ways.
 +
                    There was another one I was thinking of. Actually, this is jumping
 +
                    around a little bit. Editorial, in different people submitting
 +
                    articles and then some people I would ask would you do something
 +
                    for us early, early on. That's another thing we went to. I went to
 +
                    comic cons and the sci-fi cons to promote the magazine.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That was early.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was early, very early. I've got to tell you one little
 +
                    incident there. I also went to small press publisher conventions. I
 +
                    went to one over Labor Day weekend, and I don't know what year it
 +
                    was. It was probably '75, '76 maybe. The place that they gave this
 +
                    small press to exhibit was one platform up in the subway under
 +
                    Lincoln Center.
 +
                    Lincoln Center, of course, huge, but down one level is not shops.
 +
                    There may be a few shops but it was a big, open platform. That's
 +
                    where we were exhibiting. I had my magazines out there on a table
 +
                    and I was talking to these other underground publishers and so on,
 +
                    typical.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That's why they put you there. It's underground.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Underground, yes. It was a Friday, Saturday, Sunday or Saturday,
 +
                    Sunday, Monday. I said, "I can't be here on Sunday." Talked to the
 +
                    person next to me and I said, "I'm just going to leave a cigar box
 +
                    that says put your money in the box." He said, "You're nuts. We're
 +
                    in a New York subway system. You're going to come back with nothing
 +
                    in your box." I left a bunch of change in it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            And your ex-wife said you were too trusting.
 +
 
 +
  David:            [laughs] Yes. I left like 15 single dollar bills in there so people
 +
                    could make change and I just left it there, from Saturday to Monday
 +
                    and I came back Monday, about $40, $50 in the box. I don't know
 +
                    whether it paid for everything that was taken but it worked out
 +
                    fine. Yes, I was obviously too trusting, but at roughly the same
 +
                    time there was something going on. I think it was a sci-fi
 +
                    convention or world future society. Yeah, it was world future
 +
                    society convention.
 +
                    They had some notable people there. I was sitting down with Alvin
 +
                    Toffler in the lobby of the Colosseum and along comes over to us
 +
                    Isaac [inaudible 00:27:03] . What a wonderful little party. We had
 +
                    some coffee in the Colosseum and I said, "Isaac, can you write me
 +
                    an article?" "I got a good story from the iRobot series that hasn't
 +
                    been widely used or published and you can use that." So I got an
 +
                    early contribution from Isaac [inaudible 00:27:27] and Alvin
 +
                    Toffler wrote something for us.
 +
 
 +
                    Anyway, got to know some interesting people at that point. Then who
 +
                    should submit an article, and by this time Betsy was the editor...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Out of transom comes an article from Michael Creighton. It was a
 +
                    program. I can't remember what it was about.
 +
 
 +
  David:            For the Apple.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was a program for the Apple, but it was something really dumb.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I don't know if you remember, we were reminded when Harry Garland
 +
                    was up at the thing in Seattle. Harry Garland was one of the first
 +
                    ones to produce an independent manufactured a board, a 100 bus
 +
                    board, for the Altair, and this was really early, and he called it
 +
                    the TV Dazzler. It made little squares light up but he could make
 +
                    lots of them light up in different colors or just a few. It was a
 +
                    silly program but people said we can do graphics on this.
 +
                    He eventually developed it into quite an interesting graphics tool,
 +
                    I guess. People did buy the TV Dazzler for itself but the purpose
 +
                    was here's a board you could produce graphics, do some graphics. In
 +
                    any event, that's essentially what Michael Creighton's program did
 +
                    for the Apple. Not much.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            This was not early on.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, it was after the Apple 2 was out.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was probably...
 +
 
 +
  David:            '80.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            1980, yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Did you publish it?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No. I rejected it. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            I'm like we're going to reject an article from Michael Creighton?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We both liked Michael Creighton as an article.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh my gosh. But we did. We really did. We had standards.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Later on, though, he wrote something. It was better. It wasn't
 +
                    great. He did write something better and we did accept it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Orson Scott Card wrote for Compute, I think. I don't know if he was
 +
                    Orson Scott Card at that point, but [inaudible 00:30:00] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            We've crossed paths with some people.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [inaudible 00:30:09] was actually very nice
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, 6 foot 8, big guy. He was very nice. Unfortunately, he died.
 +
                    On the other end of things, early on, we really were...this was
 +
                    probably even before Betsy got in...kind of in the small press
 +
                    underground publishing movement as much as in the legitimate big
 +
                    magazines, because that's kind of where I started.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            When I came, we had just published the first sleek, coated paper
 +
                    magazine and coated stock. In October 1978, I believe, that was
 +
                    published. That was the first of the coated stock. That was kind of
 +
                    the bridge to legitimacy.
 +
 
 +
  David:            For the first two years, [inaudible 00:31:09] news print and I had
 +
                    a little tie in with some of the small press people. I was learning
 +
                    about publishing from small press review, I got to know some of the
 +
                    people who were doing successful publishing. A lot of them were
 +
                    magazines and comics out of San Francisco.
 +
                    So I got to know a little bit [inaudible 00:31:46] and Gilbert
 +
                    Shelton and Sherry Flannigan, and some of those early, Bobby
 +
                    London. So anyway, one ad we ran real early on was an adaptation of
 +
                    Renee and Robert Crompton. Go ahead and change my thing to creative
 +
                    computing. Go for it. Sherry Flannigan she did a comic strip called
 +
                    Tronch and Bonnie, Tronch was a little dog and Bonnie was a little
 +
                    girl and they occasionally got mixed up with a robot dog.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Was there some sort of falling out with that person?
 +
 
 +
  David:            With Sherry? No. I'm still friends with her on Facebook. They had a
 +
                    major, major problem, she was involved with Gary Hallgrin and I
 +
                    forget who the publisher was, McNeil, Bobby London. They were the
 +
                    Air Pirates funniest group that Disney took to task, that caused
 +
                    the death of a lot of publishing in the underground comics
 +
                    movement.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I don't understand.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Air Pirates were funny, they were just looking for trouble. They
 +
                    had Disney characters flying planes and getting into all kinds of
 +
                    trouble and getting into problems that Disney characters never
 +
                    would have done, sexual problems as well as just acting badly.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Disney just said, "We can't put up with this." It was an
 +
                    interesting case, because was it a copyright violation, not really
 +
                    because they were character look-a-likes, but they weren't calling
 +
                    them Mickey Mouse or Donald Duck but they looked the same or very
 +
                    similar. But, it was a landmark case in underground comics, it
 +
                    caused a lot of them to pull back, a lot on the satire and stuff
 +
                    that they were publishing.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I asked about Sherry because a number of years ago when I had first
 +
                    put the best of [inaudible 00:34:29] on my website, then after a
 +
                    while I got an email saying, "Look, you have to take this
 +
                    [inaudible 00:34:37] ." I would copyright all, it was just like
 +
                    waving arms. So I took it down but it was, I thought, maybe it
 +
                    was...
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well that whole copyright trademark thing, there interpretation
 +
                    that really, really strict...everything that goes on the Internet
 +
                    is a public domain. Well, that is not really true either. Are you
 +
                    making money from copyrighted material? If you are then that's a
 +
                    pretty clear violation. Are you affecting the copyright owners
 +
                    ability to make money with it? That's a violation.
 +
                    I'm kind of in this right now with Uruguay and TinTin, those books
 +
                    have inspired a lot of people to make parodies and fake TinTin
 +
                    covers. TinTin at the beach, places TinTin wouldn't normally go.
 +
                    Well is it affecting the sales of TinTin books, or is it actually
 +
                    increasingly them?
 +
 
 +
                    Casterman, who owns and [inaudible 00:36:07] owns the TinTin
 +
                    copyrights. They are really going after some of these people, but
 +
                    I'm not sure that they have a really good case. So some people take
 +
                    everything off and don't want nothing on the website. And others
 +
                    are saying, "Hey, this is legitimate." I have collected a lot of
 +
                    those covers, and put them up on a website.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I guess you'll find out soon enough.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I will find out, soon enough.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            They may not be right legally, but how hard do you want to fight
 +
                    it.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  David:            I think that they have to demonstrate that it's hurting them in
 +
                    some way. One last thing, from the question you asked yesterday,
 +
                    back to the money issue, when I sold the magazine, right at that
 +
                    time I took 15 percent of what I had received, and donated it to
 +
                    charities. I have in a sense signed on, although not as an official
 +
                    signee to the Gates-Buffet initiative to give away half of my
 +
                    wealth, while I am alive.
 +
                    At one point in time you can compute that, I have already given
 +
                    away more than I have received for Creative Computing to Charity.
 +
                    Of course, it had grown a little bit and we made reasonably decent
 +
                    investments and that is why it continued to grow. But, I'm really
 +
                    committed to doing that. My kids are not going to inherit it all.
 +
                    That's just the way it is, that is the way I believe. Put my money
 +
                    where my heart is. Anyway,
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Other question is, you said something yesterday, I should follow up
 +
                    that one. You said something about stealing Basic.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Well there was this big thing. Just the night before last, at this
 +
                    dinner we went to, where all the people who were at the first MITS
 +
                    conference and they referred to the letter that Bill Gates wrote.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            "Why are you stealing my software?"
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Well exactly. That was just a reference to that Bill Gates, which
 +
                    had just been brought back to my memory by that. People were
 +
                    telling stories at this. Instead of having an after dinner speaker
 +
                    they were just passing the mic around and people were talking about
 +
                    incidents and things from the past.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Did you get to sell the story to this group of...?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Not really, I was just followed up on something [inaudible
 +
                    00:39:24] .
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Some of those stories were really boring.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh yeah, long and boring. It's an interesting thing though, about
 +
                    basic itself, but it was developed at an educational institution
 +
                    originally by Kemeny and Kurtz at Dartmouth. And they, either
 +
                    deliberately or because they had gotten a lot of grant money from
 +
                    General Electric in the early time sharing systems, they basically
 +
                    let anybody use their Basic.
 +
                    It was developed at Dartmouth but later Honeywell put a system in
 +
                    at Minnesota or Florida or someplace else. They could use Basic,
 +
                    they could have a no license fee or anything. That made Basic a
 +
                    universal language that was available, at least that version of
 +
                    Basic. If you write a different version of Basic, where does that
 +
                    fall? These are some sort of violation and you need some
 +
                    permission. And basically Kemeny and Kurtz said, "No, you don't."
 +
                    And they allowed Basic to be used and developed by others.
 +
 
 +
                    Digital Equipment, at the same time, maybe even earlier, but
 +
                    roughly the same time, had developed also an interactive language
 +
                    called Focal. And Focal in many regards was more efficient than
 +
                    Basic, because they were running it on many computer and there was
 +
                    less memory to work with. On the other hand, and this was true
 +
                    Digital...as time went on, they said, "No, nobody can use Focal. We
 +
                    are not going to let, especially those people [inaudible 00:41:59]
 +
                    ." But any place else, nobody could use Focal.
 +
 
 +
                    I think it wound up with a situation like Sony and Betamax. Sony
 +
                    saying, "Betamax is ours and it is a better format that VHS," which
 +
                    it was. But then, JVC saying, "We have VHS and Toshiba. Hey do you
 +
                    want to use it? Fine, we'll license it to you for next to nothing."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You think Focal could have been Basic.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I think it could have been very big. I think it could there could
 +
                    have been very serious competition between the two languages, but
 +
                    by Digital limiting it only to their own computers and specifically
 +
                    to their mini computers, not even the big mainframes, it really
 +
                    limited the spread of Focal. In fact, it forced me to go out to the
 +
                    developers and people in educational institutions they wanted
 +
                    Basic.
 +
                    There were few schools and colleges in Boston area, near Deck that
 +
                    were OK with Focal. But stuff was getting published by Minnesota
 +
                    Educational Computer Consortium and others in Basic, [inaudible
 +
                    00:43:32] computer project. So they wanted Basic. [laughs] I had to
 +
                    go on. I hired one group, actually it turned out to be just an
 +
                    individual guy in Brooklyn that developed a Basic for 4KPDP8. Well
 +
                    Basic took 3.5K, I gave you 500 words, 512 bit not even the 16 bit,
 +
                    at least get 2 bits per...but 500 words the right programs. Wasn't
 +
                    much.
 +
 
 +
                    So that forced Lunar Lander and [inaudible 00:44:15] and some of
 +
                    those programs actually. Some of them I imported over from Focal
 +
                    into Basic. And then we had a machine that had 8K. We had a
 +
                    different version of Basic because Hewlett Packard had a machine
 +
                    that read cards, mark sense cards. We had to have a different
 +
                    version of basic for that. Then we had a timeshare Basic. We had
 +
                    six versions of Basic, five actually on the PDP8 family. It was
 +
                    absurd, it was crazy, but we had to do it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I was going to ask you, the process of like...you started
 +
                    saying...you interrupted yourself. You said, "People would submit
 +
                    articles and then..." I don't know what you were going to say next.
 +
                    But [inaudible 00:45:08] that I wanted to ask you like just the
 +
                    process of how the magazine got made. You got an article was,
 +
                    somebody just typed up or something and...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You mean the mechanics of the production?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We can receive most of the articles for the magazine came over the
 +
                    transom. And we would get these articles and our editorial system
 +
                    would log them in and pass them around to editorial staff. John
 +
                    Anderson and Russell [inaudible 00:45:42] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            Peter Fee.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Peter Fee.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            What does it mean over the transom?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Means they weren't solicited. Somebody in the middle of the night
 +
                    jumped to know [laughs] or through the mailbox. We put a little
 +
                    piece of paper on there and the guys would write their opinions.
 +
 
 +
  David:            [laughs] That is serious.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Some of the things they said. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Like what? What would they say?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            "Don't quit your day job." [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            And then they had the rubber stamp.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Somebody found a stamp. Everything that we had was used, including
 +
                    our desk and everything. And somebody found, at the back of the
 +
                    desk, a stamp. It said San Marcos on it. This was like the ultimate
 +
                    insult. [laughs] San Marcos, like you know, "Get out of here."
 +
                    [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Send it to San Marcos?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Send it to San Marcos, wherever that was. Ultimately, I would make
 +
                    the final decision whether we were going to publish this or not.
 +
                    Once we were well established, the vast majority of them went back.
 +
                    We never returned manuscripts. And they would come with piles of
 +
                    code. A lot of them were programs and, we would decide and the
 +
                    editorial assistants job to notify the person. Then we bought all
 +
                    rights, didn't we?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Mm-hmm.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            North American Serial rights, that's what we bought for everything.
 +
                    Then they would go into a cube. Sometimes we would say something,
 +
                    "Oh, this is going to go really well with this educational
 +
                    institute that we're doing in June," Like that one is for June or
 +
                    just put it in the queue and we will see when it comes or rises to
 +
                    the top or whatever.
 +
                    The more technical editors like, John Anderson, he was our best guy
 +
                    ever. They would go through the code and make sure the code worked,
 +
                    and I would edit them for content and correct them.
 +
 
 +
  David:            For English and Grammar.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, with a pen and pencil. Then they would go to our typesetter.
 +
                    Typesetter would correct them. And then they would come back, and I
 +
                    think, our lower level editorial assistant would proofread them,
 +
                    but proofread a lot of them too. When they came out typesetter, it
 +
                    was on a smooth shiny paper.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Photographic paper.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            And then, if they had screenshots or anything the art department
 +
                    would make them into photo stats or [inaudible 00:49:02] . And then
 +
                    when it was time for them to go to press they would put them on
 +
                    boards, pieces of cardboard, white paper...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So you paste up?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, they do the paste up and put it on there.
 +
 
 +
  David:            The boards were using non reproducing blue on its photograph. They
 +
                    had different outlines, blue defined columns, both two and three
 +
                    column pages and upper limits and page numbers and all that kind of
 +
                    stuff.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            We were still doing it on [inaudible 00:49:43] newspaper in 1990.
 +
                    [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Well that's exactly it, so you know what we're talking about. And
 +
                    then once you get it all together and then again somebody has got
 +
                    to read it to make sure there is no lines left out, particularly of
 +
                    the programs. Make sure that those all still make sense. There were
 +
                    many cases where line got left out or artists cuts off a things and
 +
                    realizes, "Oh, I mean to cut it short." And that whole line
 +
                    disappears and then you send it off to be printed and all the
 +
                    subscribers get a little upset because Startrek doesn't run.
 +
                    [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So that sort of thing happened frequently or often?
 +
 
 +
  David:            With typeset material, not much at all. But with program listings,
 +
                    program listings were really tough. Because you would have people
 +
                    that would submit something, and they'd have a really cheap, low-
 +
                    end dot matrix printer. And we always encouraged people, if you're
 +
                    going to submit a program, submit it in some machine-readable form.
 +
                    So we don't want to type them all in to make sure they work. Even
 +
                    though our readers are going to have to, but we don't want to have
 +
                    to do that. So send us. But even so, we might then print it off on
 +
                    one of our slightly higher end printers. But I'll tell you what,
 +
                    you have page breaks and everything else. And the Art department
 +
                    didn't have a clue about programs and stuff. The program would get
 +
                    stated down. We weren't using the full sized type for program
 +
                    listings.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah. At that point we hadn't the ability to make them fit.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's where the most common place that you'd lose a line or
 +
                    something. It would get photographed, and when it's coming out of a
 +
                    line printer, you might have one or two lines on the following
 +
                    page. "Oh, we forgot that."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Personally, I know it said so much about magazine that when it
 +
                    continued, there were just sometimes a handwritten area going,
 +
                    "Continued over here." [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, absolutely.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That was a early.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            It wasn't professional, and that was awesome. It was just like,
 +
                    "OK."
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Then what we would do, we would request when we...we would solicit
 +
                    articles. Like if there was a new Apple peripheral that we wanted
 +
                    to review, we'd get the product. Then a lot of times, our own guys
 +
                    wanted to review the stuff, but if it was something that we didn't
 +
                    have time for, or that was better suited to one of our freelancers,
 +
                    we would send it out and ask for a review of it.
 +
                    A lot of reviews came in over the transom too, but we tried to be
 +
                    careful of those, that they were not either trying to justify their
 +
                    own purchase of whatever it was or get even with the publisher for
 +
                    producing it. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Or written by the... [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That really wasn't an issue at the time, it was a more innocent
 +
                    time. That really didn't happen much, but it was, sometimes, people
 +
                    would get a product they didn't care for and totally bash it, then
 +
                    we have to go and figure out is it really that bad. We tend to not
 +
                    produce seriously negative...if it was a really bad product we just
 +
                    ignored it.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We tried to be objective with reviews, but before I got into the
 +
                    computer field at all I was in market research. There are a number
 +
                    of biases, too, that really overwhelmingly affect all kinds of
 +
                    market research polls or surveys. One is that people think they're
 +
                    better than they are. For example, if we were doing a poll or a
 +
                    research study, we'd put a question on basically designed to show
 +
                    the executives who were using this data that there were some
 +
                    biases.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He's not talking about Creative Computing.
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  David:            No, no. This was way earlier. I'm talking about Proctor and Gamble
 +
                    products or general foods or that kind of thing. Anyways, the
 +
                    question we put on was "please rank your driving ability," and we
 +
                    had from well below average, accident waiting to happen up to Mario
 +
                    Andretti, Danica Patrick, over there. And you know what, 99 percent
 +
                    of the population ranked themselves better than the average. Where
 +
                    is your average then? Its way high.
 +
                    The other thing, equally pervasive in a sense, is that people
 +
                    wanted to justify a decision, a purchase decision. In fact, back
 +
                    the 30s, the slogan for Ford Motor Company was ask a man that owns
 +
                    one. You ask a man that owns and has made a decision to buy this
 +
                    car, he's going to say "Yeah, it is the greatest car." So you put
 +
                    on questions, again, throwaway questions.
 +
 
 +
                    If you had this, or if you were an owner of whatever car it is that
 +
                    you have. "What do you have now? Would you buy another one?" People
 +
                    "Oh, yes. This is a great decision. I love this car." I'll tell you
 +
                    where you can find out, is you look at what percentage of people
 +
                    that did own that particular car did buy another one? They're
 +
                    always way lower than they those that say they would buy another
 +
                    one. It gets more pronounced with higher prices.
 +
 
 +
                    If you've made a decision to buy a high-priced car, you're going to
 +
                    think, "I'll tell you what. This Land Rover was the best car I have
 +
                    ever bought." 78 percent of people might say, "I'm going to buy
 +
                    another one." About 15 percent of the people actually do.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So [inaudible 00:56:49] magazine because people want to justify a
 +
                    review.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. That's exactly right. And as Betsy said, it could go the
 +
                    other way, too. "I think I'm getting screwed here with this product
 +
                    and I'm going to knock it." When you get reviews, in essence, over
 +
                    the transom, they're either justifying, "This was really wonderful.
 +
                    I made a great decision buying this particular product," or "I hate
 +
                    it." It's hard to know whether the review was really objective and
 +
                    realistic.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Do you ever push-back from advertisers?
 +
 
 +
  David:            All the time.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Can you tell me?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We would feel the pushback from our ad sales people. They would say
 +
                    "So and so is annoyed with you because you didn't put it." We very
 +
                    rarely put anybody's totally negative reviews, but we tried to be
 +
                    objective, and not every product is perfect. Almost every product
 +
                    is going to have some negative feature.
 +
                    We would put those in and the advertisers would then go to their ad
 +
                    rep and complain. Then the ad rep would come to us and say, "Why
 +
                    are you doing this? These people are mad. I have to sell them ads."
 +
                    We would just say "Separation of church and State. You are
 +
                    advertising in this magazine because it's a credible magazine, and
 +
                    if we let you push us around, it won't be credible anymore, and
 +
                    then it will reflect on your ad."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Do you remember anyone ever pulling ads [inaudible 00:58:39] ?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I don't, offhand. Do you?
 +
 
 +
  David:            No, but I can tell you the opposite. There were a couple of
 +
                    magazines that almost ran manufactured press releases as product
 +
                    reviews. They did get more advertising than we did from some
 +
                    manufacturers that liked that. I hate to name names, but Compute
 +
                    Magazine. I don't think you'll find any negative reviews in Compute
 +
                    Magazine. Everything was the greatest thing since sliced bread.
 +
                    Personal Computing, similar, very positive. "Gee whiz" reviews on
 +
                    almost all the things that they saw. It just isn't that way.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You have talked about [inaudible 00:59:49] . We've talked briefly
 +
                    at least about the other magazines. Sync, the one about Timex
 +
                    Sinclair. I understand the allure of publishing a magazine geared
 +
                    to a specific system, but why did you pick Timex Sinclair? [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Probably two reasons. One is that we had more of a presence in
 +
                    England than most of the other magazines.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Still do.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We had a very early agreement with David Tebbet, who was the co-
 +
                    publisher of Personal Computer, something-or-other. It might have
 +
                    been Personal Computer World. Yes, it was.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy Ahi:        Yes it was Personal Computer World, and when PC world started they
 +
                    had to call it PC World because there was already a Personal
 +
                    Computer World in England.
 +
 
 +
  David:            And we had an agreement that they would reprint materials from
 +
                    Creative Computing, which they did for a while but then they
 +
                    developed their own in-house capabilities and there was enough
 +
                    differences. We went to England and very early on had an agent in
 +
                    England that we could take subscriptions.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            A housewife who kept her dark issues in her spare bathroom.
 +
                    [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, we still know her. Hazel Greaves, Hazy. Anyway, so we were
 +
                    getting enough subscriptions from England. We were sending over, I
 +
                    don't know how they packaged them up, but they call them Mbags, M-
 +
                    bags, mail bags basically of magazines, then we mail them from
 +
                    England. So I had more of our connection with British market than
 +
                    probably any of the other magazines, we definitely did.
 +
                    And so I get to know Clarkson Clair and what's going on over there.
 +
                    And then when they bring over the computer to this country and
 +
                    Timex, my God, big outfit. They were going to market it. By that
 +
                    time you know, there was no point starting a [inaudible 01:02:25]
 +
                    magazine or an entire magazine. They were, Or Apple, they were
 +
                    already existed. So maybe this is going to be the next big one. We
 +
                    will be right there when they start and we were.
 +
 
 +
                    Timex actually put, what we had simple, simple sink or something
 +
                    but it was in the package with the computer. So that was one way of
 +
                    getting our subscriber base and we couldn't possibly afford to
 +
                    advertise and do direct mailings for magazine like that. But they
 +
                    were in essence helping us go on. So that's why it is pretty
 +
                    successful actually. Often, we were making money on the magazine
 +
                    mainly because we didn't have to promote it.
 +
 
 +
                    If we had to get subscriptions, we could not have possibly made it
 +
                    work. There wasn't enough advertising really. I don't know what the
 +
                    issue here was, but it was not as good as we would have liked it.
 +
                    The magazine would have been tiny if we maintained the same
 +
                    advertising to edit ratio we would have liked. But we didn't lose
 +
                    money out of it but we didn't make anything out of it either. I
 +
                    think it was a breakeven proposition.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            OK. Microsystems. [inaudible 01:04:09] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            I said there was a lot of early development in New Jersey and there
 +
                    was a guy named Saul Libes, you will find him probably, [laughs]
 +
                    who was the first president of the Armature Computer Group in New
 +
                    Jersey. He was a Professor at [inaudible 01:04:43] College and he
 +
                    felt that Byte magazine started out fine but then they were
 +
                    focusing more on assembled hardware and things that were already
 +
                    made.
 +
                    So he wanted to get down on really lower level of do it yourself,
 +
                    build it yourself. Microsystems was more like Byte was in the very
 +
                    beginning, focusing on circuit diagram, this was logic in PC's and
 +
                    everything.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            There first name was S100, Microsystems
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, S100 perhaps then it became Microsystems in '78 or '79. When
 +
                    some of the others came out they started [inaudible 01:05:45] 6800
 +
                    and 68,000 chips from Motorola. But I would say it was a really
 +
                    techy magazine and it was one that I think probably killed that one
 +
                    off.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was dead before [inaudible 01:06:05] . [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            It might have been. I don't know, but it was...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            S100 bus did not survive and to the [inaudible 01:06:12] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was dead before as there was these eras and the do it yourself
 +
                    S100 era,that was '75 to '78. Then it kind of had a downward spiral
 +
                    of two or three years and it was gone. Well, maybe it wasn't gone
 +
                    but it wasn't the same. And so Microsystems was tuned into that and
 +
                    they were running hardcore stuff.
 +
                    And the reason that Saul...we reach an agreement with him to
 +
                    publish it, is basically he didn't have any real magazine
 +
                    background. We thought we could do something with it. It turned out
 +
                    not to be a good fit bit we published it for a while. I don't know
 +
                    if we made money or lost money on that. Probably it didn't make
 +
                    anything. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Small business computers or computing.
 +
 
 +
  David:            What?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Small business computers? Who do we buy that from? I can't even
 +
                    remember. You can't even remember that we had it, I can tell by the
 +
                    look on your face
 +
 
 +
  David:            I can
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That one of my brothers...my brother was a publisher remember?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, I don't know who or where we got it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That just fall into grave or...?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Eventually, but that we post it for a while. I think is something
 +
                    that somebody basically left on our door step.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I think it was kind of like a puppy on the... [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            I think it came with your brother.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No, because my brother wasn't into publishing until after clearing
 +
                    college.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It sounded like a good idea at the time.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I think we saw a future in business computing
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, we did and unfortunately that was one word as if they just
 +
                    want...I mentioned yesterday that they wanted to really shift the
 +
                    focus of Creative Computing away from home and broaden out and
 +
                    shifted into the small business market. And just did not, it was an
 +
                    uncomfortable fit. We would've been better to have a separate
 +
                    magazine.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I don't remember where we got Small Business Computing from or
 +
                    where it went.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I don't know, either.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            But I know that obviously it wasn't a huge acquisition.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was a footnote.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            A footnote in the story. [laughs]
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Actually, a bigger acquisition was earlier and that was Rom
 +
                    Magazine. Rom was published by who?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Erik Sandberg-Diment.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Right.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            D-I-M-E-N-T.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Connecticut. He did a nice job with the magazine, very nice job
 +
                    with it. Published nine issues and a little different focus than
 +
                    Creative but it really overlapped us very nicely. He had more
 +
                    graphic stuff. In fact, it was through him that I got to know
 +
                    George Baker and some of the people up there. The other guy that
 +
                    did the pixelated blocks photos. You've seen those.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            The Einstein.
 +
 
 +
  David:            [crosstalk] The Lincoln with block pics.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Block pics.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Block pics. OK, he and George Baker sort of came as a package with
 +
                    Rom, they knew of each other. We actually, I would say, four or
 +
                    five issues, ran Rom as a whole separate section and even set it on
 +
                    the cover of Creative Computing and Rom. Then it became evident...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I think that was because he had a whole other editorial kicking
 +
                    around. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            We bought.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Could be. And then we would just merge it in completely, but that
 +
                    was a very good fit. It brought us more editorial than it did
 +
                    subscribers. They did not have a big subscriber base, but it was a
 +
                    nice marriage in a sense.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Video and Arcade Games only published I think four issues.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Three.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Three?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Actually, three but if you've got a hold of the third one, you're
 +
                    doing well. I think Ziff cut that off after two real issues got
 +
                    mailed out. We did a third one but it wasn't sent out to
 +
                    subscribers.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            My website only has two issues.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. There were only two that really were distributed.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So I have...
 +
                    [crosstalk]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            A goal. [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, if you can get a hold of the third one. [laughter] I don't
 +
                    even have that. There's a same thing on Tarry-on. There were three
 +
                    issues of Tarry-on that I did not keep the third issue. Oh, man.
 +
                    Shoot me.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            But Video and Arcade Games, there were at least five or six other
 +
                    magazines focusing on that. Talk about magazines that were running
 +
                    non-objective manufacture-provided reviews, all the others were. I,
 +
                    maybe, convinced myself and some people at Davis that there was a
 +
                    need for really objective...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Ziff? Did Ziff do that?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Huh?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Were we with Ziff when we did that?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, yeah. That was a late one. So we said, let's...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Continue it through.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, that was definitely. Let's do it. But again...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Not only that but it was going to be fun.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was going to be a lot of fun. [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So why did it fail?
 +
 
 +
  David:            OK, again you got to look at the eras and what was happening.
 +
                    Arcade games then really were on the decline. Video arcades where
 +
                    you go in and pop a quarter in, because there was so much more
 +
                    capability in the home computers and the [inaudible 01:12:55] and
 +
                    the Mattel and the different home systems. They could do all now,
 +
                    not as much, but you get a pretty darned good game that you could
 +
                    take home with you and not have to pop a quarter in the slot every
 +
                    time you play.
 +
                    So arcade games were kind of on the downward spiral, so that
 +
                    eliminated a lot of potential advertising. We weren't going to get
 +
                    any advertising from Nameco and all of the producers of the arcade
 +
                    games, which was, "Hey, it is advertising along with..." And the
 +
                    other home producers of the game, there were four or five magazines
 +
                    already that they were pouring money into. They didn't really want
 +
                    another one.
 +
 
 +
                    So it was advertising that or just lack of advertising that killed
 +
                    that off. We just couldn't get it. I think there was still a need
 +
                    for what we had sort of in a sense proposed to do of objectively
 +
                    reviewing games and secondly, we're telling people how to play
 +
                    them.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, it was strategies.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Strategies. It was advertising that we just didn't have, couldn't
 +
                    get.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [inaudible 01:14:28] Atari explored and Atari I think we've covered
 +
                    pretty well.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Military vehicles, which we talked about.
 +
 
 +
  David:            [laughs] Yes.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So the other magazines, Byte and [inaudible 01:14:45] , was it
 +
                    rivalry? Was it friendly competition?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Byte, we were in bed together. Not in bed together, but we
 +
                    published the best of Byte. Creative Computing did.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            For awhile.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, just one.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No. That wasn't that friendly a rivalry. It wasn't that friendly
 +
                    after awhile.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It wasn't friendly once they sold to McGraw Hill, and they sold
 +
                    early. Then everything was off. We did some joint promotions with
 +
                    Byte for hardware creative software. We ran the ads for each other
 +
                    for a short time.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That's when McGraw Hill cutoff.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [laughs] In a heartbeat. No more of that.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We felt that basically we weren't even competing for the same
 +
                    advertisers. Just a few, but not really. Certainly, we were not in
 +
                    direct competition at all with Byte. So that was just kind of all
 +
                    in the same place and you're going in a hardware direction, we're
 +
                    going on the software.
 +
                    When Wayne Green threw this intrigue with his wife and everything
 +
                    else, lost Byte Magazine. He was fit to be tied. "I'm going to kill
 +
                    them!" and he started Kilobyte. It wasn't killable. It was Kilobyte
 +
                    for I don't know how many issues.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Not many.
 +
 
 +
  David:            1000 bytes. [laughter] and a kilobyte, it had a dual meaning there.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That was a ferocious and very nasty. Oh, horrible rivalry. Somebody
 +
                    early on forced him not to use the name byte at all.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            So it was byte.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            So they changed it to Kilobaud.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Which didn't mean anything.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            No.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So did you have a relationship with Wayne?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Nobody had a relationship with... [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Nobody really had a relationship. I knew him, of course. He was
 +
                    going his own way. Now the one area actually where we got into more
 +
                    competition with him than in the magazine itself, because again, he
 +
                    was trying to be like Byte, hardware oriented and he published 73
 +
                    magazines so he was basically focusing on the ham radio people, the
 +
                    do it yourselfers and so on. But they started a software division.
 +
                    It was pretty good. They had a lot of the same types of software
 +
                    that we did on cassette tape.
 +
                    In any event, we really had more of a head to head rivalry on the
 +
                    software than in the magazine publishing. We never really had
 +
                    anything to do with the magazine products or books. They also
 +
                    published some books but more like the magazine hardware type of
 +
                    thing. We weren't quite as selective, but our book publishing we
 +
                    did get into things that weren't in the magazine. We published
 +
                    books with more of a hardware orientation. We had a little broader
 +
                    line of books than the type of things that we had in the magazine.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I don't know if you want to open this can of worms, but you said to
 +
                    me in an email, "You couldn't find two people whose vision,
 +
                    philosophy, ethics, and view of business and life was further apart
 +
                    than Wayne and I." Can you elaborate on that? [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            He was just basically unpleasant, is my take on him. I didn't know
 +
                    him that well but it was just sort of like he had a chip on his
 +
                    shoulder and was daring you to knock it off. Wouldn't you say?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You knew him before I did but by the time I arrived on the scene
 +
                    that was just sort of the general industry perception of him, I
 +
                    think. It was just stay away from him, leave him alone, he's not
 +
                    very nice.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, one other thing, which we sort of touched on a couple of
 +
                    times, I'm very trusting. [laughter] Overly so, according to my ex-
 +
                    wife and I think there would be a couple of examples. Wayne would
 +
                    walk out of that door, boy, out of sight, 'you're going to do
 +
                    something to screw him' is what his view would be. He did not trust
 +
                    anybody.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [laughs] And least of all, his ex wife.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            It's the old saying, "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean
 +
                    that somebody isn't out to get you." He thought everyone was out to
 +
                    get him, everybody. So we were totally philosophically different.
 +
                    Our ways of doing business were different. I shake hands with you,
 +
                    we have an agreement. You don't shake hands with Wayne.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I don't think his employees were ever happy either.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh!
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You talked to them and it shows. He didn't have like a great...
 +
 
 +
  David:            Rapport.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Well it was not. The culture of his organization I don't think was
 +
                    particularly, I think it was probably permeated with this lack of
 +
                    trust.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, one thing, we had fun. We really did have fun at Creative
 +
                    Computing. Perhaps some of the editorial staff, too much. There was
 +
                    one point where Betsy had to away their...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Well they were all young guys. Some of them even still in high
 +
                    school, they would play games for hours and hours and hours, long
 +
                    after the reviews were done. It was one, self-contained thing that
 +
                    played football, and they played it for hours. I had to take it
 +
                    away from them. Like "don't make me be your mother"
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Was there any drug culture at all? If you read [inaudible 01:22:17]
 +
                    and he was cocaine and high everyday and popped...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Not that we knew of. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  David:            The East coast was quite different.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No there was nothing, really. I don't think so. In fact, my client
 +
                    John Anderson and Peter Fee, they were actually kind of protective
 +
                    of me in a lot of ways. I can remember being in John's office and
 +
                    they were talking about a movie or something like that. John said,
 +
                    "No, you wouldn't like this movie, don't go to this movie." That
 +
                    kind of thing, they were funny guys. They just kept laughing. David
 +
                    Lubar. They were free spirits but they were very funny, talented
 +
                    guys.
 +
 
 +
  David:            He is coming out with a line of children's books, weird, weird
 +
                    stuff. The last one, something about the lawn mower weenies. He has
 +
                    a line of 6 or 8, and they're all little short stories. Some of
 +
                    them were adaptations of stuff that almost got published in
 +
                    Creative Computing, probably some of them did. Lubar is a funny
 +
                    guy. When he left and went to work for one of the video gaming
 +
                    companies, his first big successful game was "Worm Wars." You were
 +
                    like, "Worm Wars?" [laughs]
 +
                    Other people are fighting real serious warrior and you are fighting
 +
                    with worms. We just had a different kind of culture, a lot of fun.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Jonny Anderson went to work for A plus in San Francisco. He was one
 +
                    of the five people killed in the San Francisco earthquake of 1986.
 +
                    He was in a car and a piece of the building fell on the car. He was
 +
                    a really funny guy.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We did not have a serious business culture.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            No, we had this great big room with a bunch of tables set up around
 +
                    the edges, in the middle. It was kind of like that, nowhere near as
 +
                    neat.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I will clean that up for you.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [laughs] Just tangles of wires, and we had to have one of every
 +
                    kind of computer so we can test all the software, and this one
 +
                    would be running this kind of peripheral, and it was like a young
 +
                    guys dream job.
 +
 
 +
  David:            You commented yesterday about how we had a bunch of high school,
 +
                    not quite, but still...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I said that they were in their early 20s but they basically had the
 +
                    maturity of high school students, they needed a little bit of
 +
                    mothering. But I wasn't that myself. They were just really nice
 +
                    guys, we did a good job hiring those kids.
 +
 
 +
  David:            When you talk about the Atari cultures and some of the others,
 +
                    where every Friday some of these companies have parties, that kind
 +
                    of thing. We had an annual party, a picnic. We didn't need weekly
 +
                    parties and stuff to let you have fun because that stuff was going
 +
                    on every day, not really partying but playing the games and
 +
                    bantering and everything else.
 +
                    As they say, at Washington, a real efficient business culture.
 +
                    Heck, I didn't work for Digital Equipment, which was still a pretty
 +
                    relaxed place, but AT&T which was anything but. This is as far away
 +
                    from that kind of corporate culture as you can get, but it worked.
 +
                    Didn't make a lot of money, but it worked.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [inaudible 01:26:58]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah. And I think they appreciated it because they weren't making
 +
                    tons of money either, but they were having a lot of fun. They
 +
                    enjoyed going to work, they really enjoyed it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Speaking of Kindle, I've done it but haven't told anybody yet that
 +
                    best of Creative Computing too is now available on Kindle. And I
 +
                    have been working backwards. [crosstalk] I just had it on sale.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I haven't publicized it yet for sale.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            They won't let you do. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah, I think they will have two.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Did you do that through Amazon? How do you convert is to Kindle?
 +
                    I scan them and then I do CRM and I use Elance or utilize some
 +
                    service in India that converts it back to ASCII, and then they
 +
                    convert it into an E-book from there. It's a lot of work, I want it
 +
                    done well, and I want it to be super awesome. And they just
 +
                    [inaudible 01:28:40] , like we were talking about before.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Outsourcing and stuff. But I can do it myself but that would take
 +
                    way too long. So I just try to do the quality control [inaudible
 +
                    01:28:49] . It's not perfect but better than nothing.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I have reached the point where with my Dodge restoration book, that
 +
                    yes, many of the borders around the pictures are terrible, they're
 +
                    hand drawn and so on. But I'm not going to bother to re-do that, I
 +
                    just want take the book, get it into some sort of machine readable
 +
                    format, PDF or something. [inaudible 01:29:24] somebody that can...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah, I can get you off with that. We can then figure it out.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I found one extra one that I can cut up.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That will help a lot. [inaudible 01:29:37] . If you want to sell a
 +
                    PDF of it, that would be up in couple of day. That's easy, but a
 +
                    searchable Kindle version that takes longer.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I don't want a Kindle version because people want to print out
 +
                    something that they can...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Take out to the garage
 +
 
 +
  David:            When people slide under the vehicle they have it there, "Oh, OK
 +
                    this is what I should be looking for."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            If you scan it and upload it to Amazon, even create space from
 +
                    [inaudible 01:30:06] company, then there could actually be another
 +
                    book, that looks pretty identical to the first one. We will figure
 +
                    out.
 +
                    Do you [inaudible 01:30:23] ? But are you familiar with...?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Are there any?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            There are but they are very different than Creative.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Somebody out there said, "What did you read today?" The only
 +
                    magazines that I will occasionally pick up in the computer field
 +
                    are mostly from England, Internet magazines, well there are
 +
                    several, which is sort of interesting that the dominant Internet
 +
                    magazines come from England, but they do.
 +
                    If I want to do something, and I haven't lately, but I wanted to
 +
                    get into doing something different or interactive or something with
 +
                    my website. I'd pick up one of those magazines and kind of have
 +
                    same kind of thing that Creative used to publish. Here is a code to
 +
                    do it in Pearl or HTML, whatever.
 +
 
 +
                    I converted all of my website, quite a while ago, to XHTML from old
 +
                    HTML. I did not like any of the programs that generate web pages,
 +
                    mainly because...Well, today its probably OK, but I felt that
 +
                    earlier on, they were very inefficient. You'd have this much code
 +
                    for something and XHTML would write it in five lines.
 +
 
 +
                    My old-fashioned [inaudible 01:32:23] said, "You know what, the
 +
                    interpreter or compiler or whatever, has to go through a lot of
 +
                    that just to pick out what is going to be displayed." My web pages
 +
                    are very compact and short. They are all XHTML, none of that is
 +
                    extra [inaudible 01:32:41] style pages and everything else.
 +
 
 +
                    Anyway, so that's what I'll pick up a magazine for. I'm was doing a
 +
                    little bit of programming in Pearl and then I said, "No. You know
 +
                    what, I can get routines that I can download and I don't have to
 +
                    learn it myself. I learned enough to know that I don't want your
 +
                    Pearl program." [laughs] Or what is the other one? I don't know.
 +
                    I'm right at the point now where I'm wanting to do some more things
 +
                    that I can't, so I'll probably purchase some more computer
 +
                    magazines and learn about it.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Has anyone talked to you about the purchase of PC by Davis?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Mm-hmm.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            This is a big story.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  David:            She was involved.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I was involved. There was a magazine called PC. I was in San
 +
                    Francisco.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            PC magazine.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            PC Magazine, right. And, there was a guy named Tony Gold and there
 +
                    was somebody else that I can't remember. There was Tony Gold and
 +
                    this Mr. X started this magazine and they hired...David Banell will
 +
                    probably tell you all, I don't know all the details but I'm sure he
 +
                    has it engraved in his brain.
 +
                    They hired David Banell to run it and I guess several other people,
 +
                    and my understanding is, that they told them they were going to
 +
                    give them a piece of the action, they weren't going to pay them
 +
                    very much but you're all part owners and everything, but nobody
 +
                    ever wrote it down.
 +
 
 +
                    So when Ziff Davis approached Tony Gold and Mr. X and wanted to buy
 +
                    the magazine, and the guys said, "Oh yeah, sure," and they sold it
 +
                    to him and all these people that were working for them said, "Well,
 +
                    what about us. We're part owners too." But there was no proof of
 +
                    it. So Ziff bought it, and they were right in the middle, just
 +
                    about to go to press with an issue and they got word that it had
 +
                    been purchased by Ziff.
 +
 
 +
                    So David Banell took just about the entire staff and they walked
 +
                    out and went across town and started PC World. Apparently their
 +
                    lawyers said, "Don't take anything with you." So they just walked
 +
                    out and left the offices as they were, and Ziff, who now had a
 +
                    magazine to get out and no one to do it, sent me out to San
 +
                    Francisco for a couple of weeks and there was like an editorial
 +
                    assistant and a couple of freelance writers, were the only people
 +
                    left.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            So this is when you became the interim.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            This is how I become the editorial director of PC. So I basically
 +
                    went out there and walked into this office and had to pull together
 +
                    their issue and get it off to the printer. They had a big dummy on
 +
                    the wall where everthing...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            They lay all the...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            They lay all the impositions where all the pages and the stories
 +
                    were going to go and they moved everything around. [laughs] But
 +
                    they couldn't resist.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That is awesome.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            This one guy, whose name I wish I could remember. Barry Owen,
 +
                    worked with me, and we were able to get it off to the printer and
 +
                    then pack everything up and send it back to New York and then they
 +
                    hired Barry Owen, he moved to New York and he eventually become the
 +
                    editor, because that was who they had.
 +
                    I was sort of the editorial director for a while and they said
 +
                    that, "If you were going to do this, you would have to come to the
 +
                    city. We are going to really set up an office here and make it
 +
                    real." And I said, "No, I am not going to drive into the city every
 +
                    day or take the train or the bus or anything." It was a interesting
 +
                    story and we were getting much more interesting version of it from
 +
                    David Barnell, who was there. [laughs]
 +
 
 +
                    And in the mean time, they were all starting up PC World and taking
 +
                    all of their freelancers and trying to make it as difficult as
 +
                    possible for PC. That was a big rivalry, obviously.
 +
 
 +
  David:            And then it created a couple of months of problems at creative too,
 +
                    because my editor was gone. I had really gotten very dependent to
 +
                    rely on her for so many things. "I got to edit this myself." And
 +
                    then the whole question mark was, OK if PC magazine, is she can
 +
                    stay with it. It was a time of uncertainty.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I'm sure it was a bad career move.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah. But PC magazine still exist.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, exactly. I don't know if I would have existed if I had to
 +
                    commute to New York, that's a nasty commute. Millions of people do
 +
                    it but, I just didn't want to be one of them. I didn't mean to
 +
                    interrupt, so back to you.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            What are you most proud of, or everything you have done?
 +
 
 +
  David:            OK, that's obviously not a one word answer. Proud is, I am not
 +
                    crazy about it. I guess the fact that I continued to hear from
 +
                    people that said, "Hey, I got my start in computing from Basic
 +
                    computer games or Creative Computing," or something that I had my
 +
                    hand in, that makes me feel pretty good.
 +
                    You have a long term, or longer term influence that just what you
 +
                    do at the time, it's living on. It's not living on forever. Basic
 +
                    isn't going to live on forever. But I think the idea that having
 +
                    some positive influence on other people, on their lives, on their
 +
                    careers, that's a good.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You helped send people into the computer science field.
 +
 
 +
  David:            And you know the specific individual accomplishments. Yeah, I wrote
 +
                    a couple of programs that are probably in some cases, maybe not the
 +
                    program but the routines, are still in use. That's minor compared
 +
                    to having an influence on people and their career and their
 +
                    outlook, their future. That's way more important. "OK so I wrote a
 +
                    great algorithm, so what."
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            And you really think it's the same algorithm that's being used in
 +
                    Google maps and...
 +
 
 +
  David:            Portions of it, yeah. But that is minor. I look back and I say,
 +
                    "Almost anything that I wrote in the last 30-40 years, if I were
 +
                    doing it today, I would have done it a little differently, but I
 +
                    didn't know then what I know now." So there's no one thing I could
 +
                    say, "Oh, that was a really great article, or great insight," or
 +
                    something. Anything can be improved upon.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Sure. That's what disappoints me about computer magazines today is
 +
                    I don't think that it seems like children going to be able to go.
 +
                    It's not going to motivate anybody to do anything, other than use
 +
                    Word version 18 or whatever. There's no Basic programs to type
 +
                    anymore and it's not exciting.
 +
                    [cross talk]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. Well, [inaudible 01:42:31] was mentioning that at breakfast,
 +
                    oh gosh that was just yesterday.
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            It was yesterday [laughs] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            [laughs] That kids today don't have any feeling about, or I should
 +
                    say knowledge about the real basics of bits. What is a bit?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Right.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Nobody knows anymore. He wanted to find some little simple piece of
 +
                    hardware. Really, I guess he has, that every kid when they're in
 +
                    the 5th or 6th grade will be exposed to this so they'll have some
 +
                    concept of what bits are all about. Are you ever going to get that
 +
                    into schools today? No. So anyway, it's just kind of, hopefully
 +
                    there's been some long term influence.
 +
                    And what I'm doing now even, which is mainly developing bible
 +
                    studies for...well, I mostly have guys that have had a drug or
 +
                    alcohol addiction problem coming to this. They're in a rescue
 +
                    mission. I'm hoping that these studies can have a little bit of an
 +
                    influence on the direction of their lives. They're a positive
 +
                    influence on where they go from here. So it's kind of, people more
 +
                    than a specific thing or whatever.
 +
 
 +
                    [pause]
 +
 
 +
                    Those are terrible copies.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            They are copies. These are from the scans. I was printing scans and
 +
                    I wasn't trying to make them pretty. Just for my reasons, it was
 +
                    quick and dirty. I could've bumped the contrast and stuff.
 +
 
 +
  David:            There's Carl.
 +
                    [pause]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Do have anything left, like how many subscribers you had over time?
 +
                    Is that data around anymore? How many newsstand copies you had? I
 +
                    assume that is a lot.
 +
 
 +
  David:            OK, maximum, I think we mentioned that. We hit just about a half a
 +
                    million before Ziff killed it. Then, they gave people a choice of
 +
                    three magazines that they expected to continue to publish, PC,
 +
                    Apple's A+, or Mac User.
 +
                    I'm guessing that most people went with PC. One of the reasons
 +
                    actually was Ziff's rationale at that point was, PC World had
 +
                    really grown a lot and the circulation base of PC World and PC were
 +
                    very close. They were both about a half million. PC might have had
 +
                    a small lead.
 +
 
 +
                    Then, by killing Creative Computing and rolling all of those
 +
                    subscribers, there was some overlap. Certainly, there were some
 +
                    subscribers that got both magazines. You probably had a quarter of
 +
                    a million additional subscribers into PC. All of the sudden, they
 +
                    go to advertise, "We've got three-quarters of a million and PC
 +
                    World only has half a million."
 +
 
 +
                    That was when PC had a huge growth spurt. You know, they started
 +
                    publishing those telephone-book-thick issues.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I would think that it probably still holds the record for the
 +
                    largest magazine ever published, whenever the issue was that they
 +
                    published it, it was their biggest one. Certainly magazines aren't
 +
                    getting bigger now. They didn't continue to increase in size after
 +
                    that.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Then they started publishing it twice a month. The nudge that the
 +
                    subscriber base at Creative, gave to PC really, separated them
 +
                    completely from PC World. They had their reasons.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            OK. This is a chart of the page count of Creative Computing over
 +
                    its life. It's not a question, I just made a chart. Every December
 +
                    there's a peak for the big December issue. Right at the end it
 +
                    just, all of the sudden, stopped.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well, that's when Ziff had decided to kill it, which was almost a
 +
                    year before. They basically let us publish for another eight or
 +
                    nine months after they had made the decision.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            There was a lot of back and forth. Are they going to kill it? Are
 +
                    they not going to kill it?
 +
 
 +
  David:            They weren't promoting, no subscription promotion. They were saving
 +
                    their money. If you don't promote the subscriptions, you're not
 +
                    going to get them.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            This is page count.
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was advertising.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [inaudible 01:48:59]
 +
 
 +
  David:            It wasn't actually subscriber base didn't drop them. That's cool.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I just thought I'd do a comparison, even though that's not really
 +
                    what I'm doing here. In the beginning, you guys were bimonthly and
 +
                    they were monthly. I couldn't know how to do it accurately. Their
 +
                    page count's actually higher, because they were doing twice as
 +
                    much. I don't have all the data here. You guys tended to publish
 +
                    larger issues than "Kilobyte?"
 +
 
 +
  David:            It was so dependent upon advertising. You got some magazines, they
 +
                    would run 80, 90 percent advertising, if they could. In some
 +
                    special interest fields, you can get away with that, because people
 +
                    are actually buying the magazine for the advertising, not for the
 +
                    editorial content.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            [inaudible 01:50:02] , a good example.
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's exactly right. Even what the guys that bought Military
 +
                    Vehicles, they just went over so heavily to...I always believe that
 +
                    you should have at least one-third editorial content, preferably
 +
                    more. They dropped down to 20 percent to edit.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            There was one issue, the 10th anniversary issue, I don't mean to be
 +
                    picking on Wayne here. There was this quote he happened to say,
 +
                    which I thought was really interesting to me, I wanted to get your
 +
                    take on it. He said, this is in 1984, "A computer system doesn't
 +
                    really stand a prayer anymore unless there's at least one
 +
                    dedicated, independent magazine for its users."
 +
 
 +
  David:            Wayne said that?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Wayne said that. Is that true? At the time, would you have agreed
 +
                    with that?
 +
 
 +
  David:            In '84? Again, you've got to look at where we were in the cycle at
 +
                    that point. The cycle was then, there were more computers dying off
 +
                    than there were new ones being released. Standardization had come
 +
                    in really. You've got the IBM PC, and everybody's producing a PC
 +
                    clone. Apple kept going, and Atari, and Commodore attempted to.
 +
                    If you were to start a computer company at that point, with a new
 +
                    computer, yeah, you'd need something to give your user base
 +
                    something to do with it, more than just what the manufacturer was
 +
                    selling. So, that's probably accurate. What do you think?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Yeah, I think it's accurate. That's what people started to expect.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yeah. Another chord of the same issue which we've kind of touched
 +
                    on from Tom Dwyer. This is in 1984. He's saying, "Computer
 +
                    magazines used to have personality [laughter] and now they don't."
 +
                    Now, they really don't.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            They really don't!
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I think they still have personality in form but now it's just
 +
                    inconsistent.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah. Right.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Who was Tom Dwyer? I don't remember him.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Tom Dwyer? He was at University of Pittsburgh. He came up with all
 +
                    those neat applications. He and Margo...He had the best basic
 +
                    primer of anybody, in fact the only one that both Kemeny and Kurtz
 +
                    endorsed outside of their own material. He had really written some
 +
                    good Basic books.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I'm just finishing up here. The Internet says you were born in
 +
                    1939. Is that right?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yes.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Where were you born?
 +
 
 +
  David:            New York, New York.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Excellent.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I was born in the hospital that my father had a hand in designing.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Really?
 +
 
 +
  David:            He was an architect up until the Recession. I think he, perhaps,
 +
                    designed the restrooms but he wasn't the...
 +
                    [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            When were you two married?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            1988. 25 years ago.
 +
 
 +
  David:            June 18, 1988.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            What's your last name now?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Mine?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Yes.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Ahl.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            OK.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I tried keeping this professional thing and it was just way too
 +
                    confusing, since that really wasn't my name anyway. That was my
 +
                    first husband's name, and then just...this is way too complicated.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            My wife kept her maiden name and now she wishes she hadn't. It's
 +
                    just confusing. It just made sense to do.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            If had been my maiden name, I might have, but it really wasn't.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            What haven't I asked you that I should have?
 +
 
 +
  David:            [laughs] We kind of were noodling it around last night and said,
 +
                    "Man, the guy's thorough."
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You the most prepared interviewer ever.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I jotted down a couple of notes. Nope.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Got everything?
 +
 
 +
  David:            What's your thinking? Because originally you were talking to me
 +
                    about covering Wayne's magazines and so on.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            My original thought, when I had put no thought into it, was that it
 +
                    would be half about Wayne's magazine and half about Creative. First
 +
                    of all, after talking to him, I thought there's not enough to do
 +
                    that.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Did you talk to Wayne?
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            I talked to Wayne.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Well that's good to know, right? Carl Helmers didn't know if Wayne
 +
                    was still alive.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            He's still alive.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That's true. We asked Carl Helmers if Wayne was still alive and he
 +
                    was [inaudible 01:56:06] .
 +
 
 +
  David:            Actually, there was another guy up there that published a computer
 +
                    magazine. What the heck was the name of it?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Who are you talking about?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Up in New Hampshire, Peterborough. It was one of the earlier would-
 +
                    be competitors to Datamation. So, it was much earlier.
 +
                    He was absolutely totally convinced about the Kennedy assassination
 +
                    and published a computer analysis of all the photos and everything
 +
                    else. Every single issue of the magazine had this stuff. He and
 +
                    Wayne were on the same wavelength on that. You ask Wayne about the
 +
                    conspiracy. [laughs] You'll get an earful.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            In answer to your question. First, it was going to be the two, and
 +
                    then that happened. Also my wife said, "If you're doing two, then
 +
                    it's going to seem like a compare and contrast thing." That's not
 +
                    what I want to do.
 +
                    Now I'm thinking that this will be a project about the earliest
 +
                    computer magazines, the first computer magazines. That way, I can,
 +
                    whatever, four or five chapters. One on Creative, and maybe Byte.
 +
                    I'm meeting with the editor of Byte in a couple of weeks at an
 +
                    event, maybe Interface Age or one of the other ones.
 +
 
 +
  David:            If you can find Bob Jones, that would be an interesting contrast.
 +
                    He was Interface Age. He had a different perspective on a lot of
 +
                    things, and I had a lot of respect for him. He just didn't sell at
 +
                    the right time. Too bad. Bob Jones was a very serious, good guy.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Who were the other early people? Dr. Dobbs? I don't know what...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Oh, Dr. Dobbs...
 +
 
 +
  David:            Jim Warren! Oh my goodness. That would give you another perspective
 +
                    altogether.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That's, again, the California...
 +
 
 +
  David:            Jim Warren and Bob Albrecht are tied together very closely. They're
 +
                    both in sort of in the alternative lifestyle. I don't know what
 +
                    you'd call it.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            That probably had Friday afternoon pot parties. [laughter]
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, boy. Did they ever! Yes, yes. Jim also was the one that started
 +
                    the West Coast computer fairs. He's a very capable guy. Dr. Dobb's
 +
                    journal was in a sense, well, you've probably seen it. You have,
 +
                    right? OK, so you know.
 +
                    That's really low level programming rather than higher languages.
 +
                    We're talking about machine languages, assembly language,
 +
                    programming, and there. It was sort of like Microsystems was to
 +
                    Byte. Microsystems, for the really serious hardware guy. Dr. Dobbs
 +
                    was for the really serious programmer, compared to Creative which
 +
                    was for people who just wanted to type something in that would
 +
                    work.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            [inaudible 01:59:35] basic right. Yeah.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Dr. Dobbs. That was a totally different [inaudible 01:59:43]
 +
                    competitor.
 +
 
 +
  David:            We didn't compete at all. I had a view that we competed at all with
 +
                    them; they may have thought we did but I didn't think so.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Did they even have advertising?
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh yeah, actually they did, and it kept going for a long time
 +
                    because it was a small little nitch magazine. But, yeah, Jim Warren
 +
                    would be an interesting guy, very interesting guy early on. I don't
 +
                    know about Albert because you say he published more tabloid
 +
                    newspapers. I don't know if they ever really published any magazine
 +
                    size thing or not. Probably not, but it would give me a totally
 +
                    different perspective because they are coming from the west coast,
 +
                    looser or whatever.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            That sounded pretty loose.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah nothing compared to that.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I think he was sort of in rebellion when he started working at
 +
                    Creator Computing because he was coming off of AT&T where he had to
 +
                    wear a suit to work every day. So the first thing he did was burn
 +
                    his suits and wear t-shirt and jeans way before anybody was doing
 +
                    that.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I went extremely in the other direction, yeah I did, but who else
 +
                    real early. Personal computing which I think David Barnell somehow
 +
                    involved in it at some point in there. Because they moved from the
 +
                    west coast to New Jersey, they were bought by...who was that? It
 +
                    was mostly a company that published things like hardware age and
 +
                    advertiser-driven magazines. What was the name?
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            I don't remember.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Oh, gosh. Begins with an 'H'.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            Halshep
 +
 
 +
  David:            No. Anyway, when they brought personal computing...I think Barnell
 +
                    maybe even started it, and then they moved it to New Jersey, and
 +
                    then David said "I'm not going to New Jersey. I'm a west coast
 +
                    guy," or whatever. And then, they changed the whole thing totally.
 +
                    That's why I said they're one of the ones where they were so
 +
                    totally advertiser driven. A press release is a product review, as
 +
                    far as they were concerned.
 +
                    They had some interesting stuff. They were a competitor only in
 +
                    name, but also because they got the advertising. "I think I'm going
 +
                    to advertise." "Oh! We're going to publish a wonderful review! Give
 +
                    it to us." And so they were early, and they made money. There were
 +
                    a bunch of flash-in-the-pan magazines that lasted 2 or 3 or maybe 6
 +
                    issues, but nobody...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            But only one in seven made it, so...
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            One in seven, right?
 +
 
 +
  David:            That's right, exactly. I can't remember the name of some of these
 +
                    ones, but there was a very successful big magazine that published
 +
                    all Apple...reviews of Apple stuff. What was that one? Apple by
 +
                    themselves spawned I'd guess half a dozen magazines.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Inquest, and Insider, and Apple...a bunch of others there.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Right. Actually, there's one that I can't think of the name of, it
 +
                    turned out, it was bigger and thicker and creative. They were
 +
                    publishing a lot of stuff, but again, it would all be positive and
 +
                    so they really killed us on getting advertising. We had been a
 +
                    publisher of Apple material for a while. Then all these others came
 +
                    along. That one, whatever it was, was really took a lot of
 +
                    advertising from us. I'll think about it.
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            You'll remember.
 +
 
 +
  David:            I'll remember some of this. When it all settled out, you came back
 +
                    down to eight or nine, but the ones we're talking about...
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Well, at one point there was 200.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yeah, I think that's correct.
 +
 
 +
  Betsy:            You are probably counting newsletters..
 +
 
 +
  Kevin:            Probably industry-specific stuff and niche stuff but still, you
 +
                    went from one to 200, 10 years ago.
 +
 
 +
  David:            Yes. That's true.

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