Difference between revisions of "Hacker Generation"
From Convivial Tools Database
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The Hacker Generation refers to the individuals and communities that created the hardware and software of the personal computer in the late nineteen-seventies and early nineteen-eighties. | The Hacker Generation refers to the individuals and communities that created the hardware and software of the personal computer in the late nineteen-seventies and early nineteen-eighties. | ||
− | The Hacker Generation | + | The Hacker Generation was rooted in the hobbyist movement, a sub-culture of do-it-yourself electronics buffs. These were the people who bought the [[Altair]], a precurser of the personal computer, when it was first advertised in 1975. In the San Francisco Bay Area the appearance of the [[Altair]] stimulated the formation of the [[Homebrew Computer Club]], where members such as [[Steve Wozniak]] and [[Lee Felsenstein]] discussed how to make a personal computer. |
− | + | ==Members of the Hacker Generation== | |
+ | Prominent members of the Hacker Generation include: | ||
+ | *[[Steve Wozniak]] and [[Steve Jobs]], who created the [[Apple Computer]] | ||
+ | *[[Lee Felsenstein]], an electronic engineer who was a founding member of the Homebrew Computer Club | ||
+ | *[[Bill Gates]], who wrote a Basic program for the Altair, and who went on to found Microsoft | ||
+ | *[[Richard Stallman]], who founded the Free Software Movement. | ||
[[Category:Hacker Generation]] | [[Category:Hacker Generation]] |