ISBN: 0810454769
Author: People's Computer Company.
Language: English
Publisher: Hayden Book Co Inc.,U.S. (July 1981)
Pages: 180
Subcategory: No category
Rating: 4.4
Votes: 699
Size Fb2: 1995 kb
Size ePub: 1910 kb
Size Djvu: 1858 kb
Other formats: docx rtf txt mbr
Book published in 1975 by the People's Computer Company with type-in listings on many classic mainframe computer games. Dear Internet Archive Supporters, Thank you for helping us reach our fundraising goal.
Book published in 1975 by the People's Computer Company with type-in listings on many classic mainframe computer games. You keep us going and growing – with your support we will do even more in 2020. Happy New Year! –The Internet Archive Team. We’ve reached our goal! Dear Internet Archive Supporters, Thank you for helping us reach our fundraising goal.
Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. What to Do After You Hit Return Hardcover – July, 1981. by People's Computer Company.
People's Computer Company - The People s Computer Center (PCC) was an organisation, a newsletter, (the People s Computer Company Newsletter ) and later a quasiperiodical called the dragonsmoke.
The game was developed by Dave Kaufman for computers in 1973, and its BASIC source code was printed in the January 1974 issue of the People's . It was reprinted in the 1977 book What to Do After You Hit Return.
The game was developed by Dave Kaufman for computers in 1973, and its BASIC source code was printed in the January 1974 issue of the People's Computer Company Newsletter. The game was the inspiration for the multiplayer Trade Wars series, beginning in 1984, and is through that series the antecedent to much of the space trading genre.
566" People's Computer Company
What to Do After You Hit Return or . Content from Freebase licensed under CC-BY.
People's Computer Company. What to Do After You Hit Return or . Computer programming. s First Book of Computer Games is the first computer game book written by Howie Franklin, Marc LeBrun, Dave Kaufman, and others at People's Computer Company in 1975. It was published by Hayden in 1977 and then by SAMS in 1980 (ISBN 0810454769). It published arguably the first best-seller in microcomputer literature, My Computer Loves Me When I Speak BASIC and What To Do After You Hit Return. People's Computer Company (PCC) was an organization, a newsletter (the People's Computer Company Newsletter) and, later, a quasiperiodical called the Dragonsmoke. PCC was founded and produced by Dennis Allison, Bob Albrecht and George Firedrake in Menlo Park, California in the early 1970s.
Very shortly after computers were. Computer games have definitely existed since the 1960s; it's at least likely that rudimentary games existed before that, but computers themselves were rare (and expensive) at the time. One of the earliest digital computer games was tic-tac-toe.
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