place. By the...
place. By the time it got to the data, it read it correctly. So that was a lucky find.
I was afraid, partway through my floppy disk design, that I would never be able
to solve that problem. But I did. I lucked out.
Early on in the design, we were going to the very first CES (Consumer
Electronics Show) show that was going to allow personal computers—which
meant RadioShack, Commodore, and Apple. I had never been to Las Vegas and
I wanted to see this beautiful city, but only marketing was going. There was no
need for me to go. So I said, “If I get the floppy disk done, then could I go to
show it off?” It was 2 weeks away. Something like a floppy disk design, you’d
give it 6 months lead time, normally, to write down all the sheets and documents
of what you’re going to do and get them approved by managers. It’s a
horribly long cycle. This was 2 weeks away and Mike Markkula said yes. So that
was my motivation. I always had these little fictitious motivations that motivated
me and got me to do such great work. So I sat down and designed the
floppy disk, and Randy Wigginton (he was the guy just out of high school) and I
came in every single day including Christmas and New Years for 2 weeks.
I came in every single day leading up to, I think it was January 3 or 5, when we
went off to Las Vegas. I almost had this floppy disk done.
I got it to where it was writing data on a track, reading the data on a track.
Then I got it to where it was reading the data in the right byte positions. Then I
got it to work with shifting tracks, and we wanted a simple program where we
would say “run Checkbook” or “run Color Math,” and it would run the programs
that were stored on the floppy disk. So we went off to Las Vegas, and
Randy and I worked all night and we got it done to where it was working. At the
very end, it was 6:00 a.m. and I said, ‘We have to back up this floppy disk.” We
had one good disk that we prepared with the data hand-massaged to get it just
right. So I stuck it in the floppy and wrote a little program, and I typed in some
| ← life, by the | data and I → |