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Thomas E. Kurtz has died

(computerhistory.org)
613 points 1986 | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.002s | source
1. oliviersca ◴[] No.42146352[source]
I wrote my first line of BASIC in 1976, if I remember correctly! I was 15 years old, and my dad and I went to a trade fair. There was an IBM booth there. A man invited me to try a moon-landing game. It was on an IBM 5100. I asked my dad what happened to the characters that scrolled off the top of the screen! Since he wasn’t at all into tech, he asked the IBM engineer to explain it to me. And that’s when I knew it was my thing! I wrote my first few lines of BASIC right there! The following year, there was a Hewlett Packard booth where an HP-9825A (I think?) was drawing Lissajous figures on a plotter. I was mesmerized! The next year, I start working during my holidays to buy an HP-25. The year after that, I got a TRS-80 Model 1 Level II and started programming it in BASIC. I didn’t know much at the time. I even bought the Editor/Assembler, thinking it would increase the screen resolution! After that, it was an Atari ST (with Megamax C and GFA BASIC), and then PCs with a whole variety of languages ...

What has always impressed me is that some people managed, in just a few days, weeks, or months, to invent languages used by millions of people, sometimes for their entire lives! What an impact!

Mr. Kurtz, you may not have created the best language, but what you did create brought joy and inspired a whole generation of young programmers. Joy that, I feel, has somewhat faded today. Unless you’re coding in Rust!

Thank you, Mr. Kurtz!

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2. systemBuilder ◴[] No.42150268[source]
OMG you lived my dream. In 1976 I was 14 years old and started programming for the first time on the PLATO SYSTEM (university of illinois), the first computer with plasma screens, 1000 terminals, SOCIAL NETWORKS, MICROSOFT FLIGHT SIMULATOR (it was called airfight was the name back then), the FIRST DUNGEON GAME (pedit5 / dnd). As I mowed lawns I dreamed of buying an HP-25 or SR-52 calculator or maybe an IMSAI 8080 computer of my own so badly! I eventually taught PLATO how to simulate a pocket football game, and wrote BASIC programs using a toy interpreter but they didn't have a way to store programs when your session was finished! :-(
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3. ◴[] No.42150519[source]