On Wed, 6 Jul 2016, Chuck Guzis wrote:
I remember punching my documents on an 026 then
running a FORTRAN
formatter. Of course, there were many escape codes conventions in the
formatter for stuff like boldface, underlining, tables, word-wrap
suppression, "widow" control, etc.
I wasn't unique in this--indeed the whole practice predates integrated
circuits, I suspect.
Perhaps the author counts only WYSIWYG-type wapros and that things like
the MT/ST don't count either.
Actually, he does give an MT/ST example (Len Deighton). But, it was one
where the author composed on a typewriter, and then his secretary re-typed
and edited on an MT/ST.
Just the pronunciation of "MT/ST" made me want to write a word-processor,
just to be able to call it "FULL ST".
The whole thing desperately needs to be changed from "earliest" to
"early", and get rid of the entire "FIRST" nonsense.
The idea of "which authors used word processors 35 years ago" isn't too
bad, but the idea of a "FIRST" is ludicrous.
Yes, the author seems to be young enough to think of "word-processing" as
starting with TRS80/Apple][.
Nowadays, the kids think that word processing can not be done without
on-screen font display.