On Sun, 29 Sep 2002, Vintage Computer Festival wrote:
Dan Gillmor wrote of Bob Wallace in his September 28
column in the San
Jose Mercury:
Bob Wallace, personal-computer software pioneer, philanthropist and
activist, died last week in San Rafael. He had a too-short life, but
accomplished more than most.
Wallace was 53 when he died, apparently of natural causes, according to
the Marin County coroner's preliminary report.
Later adjusted to pneoumonia. When he was about 16, he had a collapsed
lung. I wonder if there is a connection?
He was one of the first Microsoft employees,
Ninth employee, but first to leave with stock.
but left in the early 1980s to start his own company,
Quicksoft, which sold a popular word processor, PC-Write.
He wrote PC-Write before he started his company. One of his earlier name
choices before Quicksoft, was "Cimarron Software". Later, he told me that
he had found that he could not do both running the company AND
program. He tried hiring programmers; when that didn't work out, he sold
the company and worked as a programmer for his new owner.
He may be best known for his early contributions to
the genre of software
that became called "shareware"-- a marketing method in which people would
He was the one who came up with that name. An earlier variant was
"commission shareware"
buy diskettes with free-to-try software on them, or
download it, and then
let them buy it if they liked it. He had qualms about the commercial
software industry, and once told the New York Times, "My philosophy is
that I want to make a living, not a killing."
Wallace worked, in college and afterward, with some of the industry's
leading lights. He joined Microsoft in 1978.
But he was always enthusiastic about helping anybody and everybody.
He introduced me to computers in the mid 1960s. The first time that I
ever saw any kind of PORTABLE computing was a Silent 700 that he had
brought home one weekend about 1970. Until then, every terminal that I
had used was immovable.
Wallace's interests ranged beyond the computing
world. He was also known
among drug-policy reformers, and funded medical and social research about
psychedelic drugs.
By the time of his death, he had sold off his software company, and had
moved to Sebastapol to run a book company dealing with psychedleics.
Wallace had many admirers, including his former
employers at Microsoft
and technology luminaries in Silicon Valley. "I remeber Bob as a gentle
soul who was soft-spoken, but creative, persistent and meticulous in his
programming and thinking," Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen told the Times
this week.
Rest in peace.