https://every.to/the-crazy-ones/the-misfit-who-built-the-ibm-pc
"In a burnished-oak corridor outside the committee room at IBM’s headquarters
in August 1980, two engineers pace nervously. Eventually, a door opens. Their
boss, Bill Lowe, emerges from the board room next door. Before they can say
anything, he smiles and nods. They laugh. They can’t quite believe it. It’s
official. IBM is going to try and build a home computer.
Bill Lowe kicked off this ambitious project, but he wouldn’t be the person who
would finish it. That role would fall to his successor, a humble, cowboy
boot-wearing mid-level executive, out of favor and kicking his heels in the IBM
corporate backwater of Boca Raton, Florida. He would take Lowe’s project
forward, one nobody else in the company wanted. Just 12 months later, on August
15, 1981, a computer would launch that would change the world: the IBM PC.
This is the story of Don Estridge, the man who brought the IBM PC to market and
changed business and home computing forever. In just five years he created an
IBM division that almost nobody else in the company wanted to exist. By 1983,
it had seized 70 percent of the microcomputer market and was valued at over $4
billion ($12 billion today). Under Estridge, IBM’s PC division sold over 1
million machines a year, making it the third largest computer manufacturer in
the world on its own. This story is based on contemporary accounts in
publications such as
InfoWorld,
PC magazine,
Time, and the
New York
Times, as well as books such as
Blue Magic by James Chposky and Ted Leonsis;
Big Blues by Paul Carroll; and
Fire in the Valley by Michael Swaine and
Paul Frieberger."
Via Kenny Chaffin.
Share and enjoy,
*** Xanni ***
--
mailto:xanni@xanadu.net Andrew Pam
http://xanadu.com.au/ Chief Scientist, Xanadu
https://glasswings.com.au/ Partner, Glass Wings
https://sericyb.com.au/ Manager, Serious Cybernetics