
When Computing Got Personal
A History of the Desktop Computer
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Narrated by:
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Norman Gilligan
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By:
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Matt Nicholson
This is the story of how a handful of geeks and mavericks dragged the computer out of corporate back rooms and laboratories and into our living rooms and offices. It is a tale not only of extraordinary innovation and vision but also of cunning business deals, boardroom tantrums and acrimonious lawsuits.
Here you will find some of the most intelligent and eccentric people you could hope to meet, including wide-eyed hippies, subversive students, computer nerds, entrepreneurs, hackers, crackers and financial backers. Some lost out and some became millionaires, but all played a part in transforming our world.
©2014 Matt Nicholson (P)2015 Matt NicholsonListeners also enjoyed...




















Critic reviews
Great details on the history of personal computing
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Good Book, Horrible Narrator.
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Good material, distracting performance
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Fond memories.
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What made the experience of listening to When Computing Got Personal the most enjoyable?
I enjoyed the stories of the early frontier days of the Personal Computer market.What did you like best about this story?
Good coverage of the early and middle PC era.What about Norman Gilligan’s performance did you like?
It was soothing to listen to, though some of the pronunciation of computer terms was incorrect.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
I wouldn't say it was a particularly moving story, but an interesting one.Any additional comments?
A fantastic listen.A fun trip down the halls of PC history.
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Great Read-Fact filled.
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Great Book, Terrible Narrator
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Kinda a hodgepodge of material
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Unlike "Where Wizards Stay Up Late" or "The Innovators", this book is largely absent of anecdotes and intrigue. instead, expect to read a series of years, facts, and names, as well as several computer specs.
Narration is monotonous but crisp. It may be the source material reflected in the reader, or a fact-based direction. I enjoy and am calmed by most British accents in narration, though some might find UK pronunciation jarring. Acronyms are pronounced as initialisms, i.e. "a. r. p. a." rather than "arpah" (ARPA).
Where the book shines is in its tidbits and trivia, where you briefly learn this or that nugget, like how the first Apple computers only had speakers to support the video game "Break Out".
It's worth the 11 hours or so for a general history but there are certainly more interesting listens.
A bit dry but worth powering through for the gems
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If you don't have time, I'd save your money and just watch that 3 part series. It has actual clips of the figures portrayed in the book like Moore, Gates, the creator of VisiCalc and the Homebrew organizer guy who all are much more interesting to listen to than this book's narrator (who's about as dry as a popcorn fart, and not as fast).
Fairly interesting book... slow/droning narrator
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