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)