Comment on this article |
View comments |
Email this Article
|
News :: Media : Political-Economy |
Documenting inventor Wayne Pickette's past: Morgan Hill Times, September 21, 1976 |
Current rating: 0 |
by Philip Stinard Email: pstinard (nospam) hotmail.com (verified) |
07 Apr 2005
Modified: 04:15:26 PM |
|
Click on image for a larger version |
Attached is a scan of an article on Wayne Pickette that appeared in the September 21, 1976 Morgan Hill Times (California), approximately one year after Wayne stopped working for Intel. (Wayne left Intel on August 15, 1975.) The article is based on an interview that the newspaper conducted with Wayne's parents, and includes a photograph of Wayne at age 17, at his parent's home, with his recently purchased PDP-8/S computer. The computer was purchased at the August 1967 Western Electric Show and Convention (Wescon) in San Francisco, California.
See related article "Intel’s forgotten past: Interview with Wayne D. Pickette, African American father of the microprocessor" at http://www.ucimc.org/newswire/display_any/22429 |
This work is in the public domain |
Re: Documenting inventor Wayne Pickette's past: Morgan Hill Times, September 21, 1976 |
by beholder (No verified email address) |
Current rating: 0 08 Apr 2005
|
There were comments on previous articles about Wayne's achievements. Some of them were from his co-workers from Intel. Isn't it enough? Though I think it can't be enough for you' Wayne's imaginary world', as you seem to be unable to read, assuming that your reading level is the same as your writing one.
Article says, 'This is Wayne". If you need each word of this article to be presented by different alphabet, then let me know. I can do it in few other than Latin alphabets!!!
I suggest though that before you decide to place any comment in the future in any language, you would make at least slight familiarity with this language first ! I also suggest that your prime concern should be your own ILLITERACY, not anybody's else great achievements. It looks ridicules when somebody like you tries to judge somebody like Wayne. |