San Francisco Examiner, 1988 – 91

1988
Lawsuit and layoffs: Osborne’s hard times (Feb 28)
San Rafael’s Pixar stoops to PC level (Mar 6)
Shredders won’t prevent data leaks (Mar 13)
So what happened to LSI and MIPS? (Mar 20)
Did someone break into IRS computer? (Mar 27)
A fair-sized reunion of the Fairchildren (Apr 3)
Three key execs leave Altos Computer (Apr 10)
Big Blue’s backdoor path into icon game (Apr 27)
Are the mouse’s days numbered? (Apr 24)
What’s going on at Genentech? (May 1)
Jobs’ new machine: Is it coming in June? (May 08)
Dear dealer: Need a good lawyer? (May 15)
All keyed up over new keyboard (May 22)
‘Electronic Bill of Rights’ stalled (May 29)
The Chairman gets a check (Jun 5)
Problem-solving in a different way (Jun 12)
Atari looking about for own chip shop (Jun 19)
Jobs’ Next machine may be Mac boom (Jul 3)
Job burnout sizzles at valley companies (Jul 10)
Readers respond about ‘job burnout’ (Jul 24)/
Goliath sues David (Jul 31)
Xerox, Dest: What might have been (Aug 7)
Hot under the collar at Macworld Expo (Aug 14)
Computer stars to twinkle Nov. 19 (Aug 21)
Jobs thinking big: A million square feet (Aug 28)
Will chips commandeer new cars? (Sep 4)
A peek inside PUC policies (Sep 11)
‘Know It All’ has it all — except a check (Sep 18)
UniSoft chief reportedly off to new exec job
Schmoozing in Paris at Apple Expo (Oct 2)
La vie Francais (Oct 9)
8 megabytes of sexual satisfaction (Oct 16)
Delay rumored for Digital’s workstation (Oct 23)
X/Open will only say this (Oct 30)
Battling the ‘layoff festival’ (Nov 6)
Inside MIPS with ‘Deep Envelope’ (Nov 13)
Ex-Apple evangelist turns author (Nov 20)
What Apple co-founder’s firm is up to (Nov 27)
Computer network insecurity (Dec 4)
Dark horse from Israel takes lead (Dec 11)
A new kind of Macworld party (Dec 18)
And now, for his Next trick, Jobs will… (Dec 25)

1989
New Year’s resolution: Do something (Jan 1)
Sun, AT&T drift apart over Unix (Jan 08)
Departures, and options for arrivals (Jan 15)
How to break into Videotex (Jan 22)
High-tech that’s heads above the rest (Jan 29)
Keeping
up with Regis (Feb 5)

On the jagged edge between fact, fiction (Feb 12)
Will they put profits before ethics? (Feb 19)
X marks a whole new market (Feb 26)
Too much unity splits Unix groups (Mar 5)
Eight years later, the cash runs out (Mar 12)
New systems don’t mean fewer jobs (Mar 19)
Soviet Union/”>Soviet Union (Mar 26)
Multimedia (Apr 2)
The tools of perestroika (Apr 9)
Parade of clones drones on (Apr 16)
New project that really is new (Apr 23)
Houses also need fiber in their diets (Apr 30)
Perestroika is going high-tech (May 7)
Green St. guys certainly aren’t green (May 14)
Suffocated by useless junk mail (May 21)
Have your brain call my brain (May 28)
Trading patriotism for profit (Jun 4)
Upside goes inside the Valley (Jun 11)
U.S. attitude makes growth difficult (Jun 18)
The best show was downstairs (Jun 25)
Apple abuzz over firing of programmer (Jul 2)
Building a better hacker (Jul 9)
TED2: A gathering of gurus (Jul 16)
The best things in life are free (Jul 23)
BiCMOS gives Intel the best of two worlds (Jul 30)
On the road to hackers’ heaven (Aug 4)
Is anyone listening out there? (Aug 11)
Coupling people, machines (Aug 18)
Multimedia: Classroom revolution (Aug 25)
Selling your secrets (Sep 3)
Picking through Apple’s trash (Sep 10)
Coming soon: Motorola and the amateurs (Sep 17)
Working with computers can be a pain (Sep 24)
Apple’s savoir-faire (Oct 1)
Bienvenue a Paris, Infomat (Oct 08)
Trying to link, science, faith, authorship (Oct 15)
Earthquakes, computers, and toxics (Oct 22)
A foreshock delivered on E-day (Oct 29)
Bridging the gap between art, technology (Dec 10)
A reminder: Humans are not computers (Dec 17)
“The Japan That Can Say No” (Dec 24)
The U.S. that can say “yes” (Dec 31)

1990
Be careful of baby’s room monitor (Jan 7)
Trends in the high-tech industry (Jan 14)
No, I’m not paranoid, but who is No. 1? (Jan 21)
There’s a worm eating at the Apple (Jan 28)
From altruism to Apple in Silicon Valley (Feb 4)
Coming soon: Meaning of (artificial) life (Feb 11)
The brain is called “The Competition” (Feb 18)
A wild week in the valley with IBM (Feb 25)
Is Technology out of control? (Mar 4)
“Environment” the buzz word during TED2 (Mar 11)
Technology designed by its users (Mar 18)
The more things change in the Valley (Mar 25)
The best April Fool’s joke of all (Apr 1)
A new art form comes of age (Apr 08)
Neo-Luddites unite! Privacy is at stake (Apr 15)
Patents on software: Hot and ugly (Apr 22)
Keeping alive the spirit of Earth Day (Apr 29)
Global networks the next big “it” (May 6)
Turning point: Productivity and computers (May 13)
Pride may precede a fall (May 20)
Much ado about nothing new (May 27)
ELF and the computer: Is it dangerous? (Jun 3)
A high-tech, “other” AIDS conference (Jun 10)
Treating the symptom, not the cause (Jun 21)
Sink-or-swim access to technology (Jul 08)
New posse on the electronic frontier (Jul 15)
No-show and no-tell (Jul 22)
Fiber in the Valley (Jul 29)
Fiber in the Valley: Hear a pin drop (Aug 5)
Fiber optics could alter the Valley forever (Aug 12)
A few minds can be better than one (Aug 19)
Computers are enlisting in illiteracy wars (Aug 26)
Competition, women, and human capital (Sep 2)
IBM’s bomb: The “Patriot Project” (Sep 9)
Of operating systems and standards (Sep 16)
The future is interpersonal computing (Sep 23)
Computer industry fails users (Sep 30)
About that “luxury” tax on computers (Oct 7)
The chips are about to fall in united Europe (Oct 14)
Want to go faster? Try going slower (Oct 28)
Television that makes you think (Nov 4)
On e-mail, rights, and censorship (Nov 11)
High-tech swords to plowshares (Nov 18)
Technology vs. humans in the workplace (Nov 25)
Finding ways to help ideas become reality (Dec 2)
On the PC horizon: Back to the future (Dec 9)
Going online profits the non-profits (Dec 16)
VDT law deserves support (Dec 23)
A year’s end rumination on technology (Dec 30)

1991
Electronic music that’s just D’Cuckoo (Jan 6)
Give users more bridges, fewer features (Jan 13)
What war does to the tech sector (Jan 20)
PC industry gets a gust of fresh air (Jan 27)
The curtain rises on PC insider drama (Feb 3)
Merge profits with planetary concerns (Feb 17)
The spectre of a world without cash (Feb 24)
On freedom, privacy, and the computer (Mar 3)
Two sides to the software patent issue (Mar 10)
Artists start to work with computers (Mar 17)
Is 1991 the year of the CD-ROM? (Mar 24)
Computers and access to private data (Mar 31)
Database access via plain English (Apr 14)
Industry giants are feeling the heat (Apr 21)
Encrypted messages bug G-men (Apr 28)
Cracking the code of misconduct (May 5)
On-line fun for just plain folks (May 12)
Untangling the fiber optic thicket (May 19)
Why didn’t Apple see this coming? (May 26)
The people speak — and they have some good advice (Jun 2)
Making an art out of making art (Jun 9)
Assault on encryption is privacy threat (Jun 16)
A fascinating look inside punk hacking (Jun 23)
Lumbering giants, taking their time (Jun 30)
Stereotypes in education have to go (Jul 7)
10 years of a wonderfully bad attitude (Jul 14)
Warning: Read this column first (Jul 21)
Encryption remains a gray area (Jul 28)
Siggraph is quite a trip (oops) (Aug 4)
Big money wasted on militarism (Aug 11)
On-line networks at their best (Aug 18)
Headed for conference heaven (Aug 25)
“Objectivity” turns into irrelevance (Sep 08)
Ma Bell slithers into court (Sep 15)
Multimedia: This stuff is finally real (Sep 22)
IBM deal is poison, Apple (Sep 29)

1992
Multimedia approach spreading (Nov 19)