Datamation was a computer magazine published in the
United
States
between 1957 and 1998. When first published
it wasn't clear there would be a significant market for a computer
magazine given how few
computers there
were.
The idea for the magazine came from
Donald
Prell who was VP of Application Engineering at a Los Angeles
computer input-output company. In 1957, the only place his company
could advertise their products was in either Scientific American or
Business Week. Prell had discussed the idea with
John Diebold who started AUTOMATION magazine,
and that was the inspiration for the name DATAMATION. Thompson
Publications of Chicago agreed to publish the magazine.
In 1998 datamation.com became one of the first online-only
publications. In 2001 Datamation was acquired by Internet.com where
it still maintains an online presence.
Computer humor
Traditionally, an April issue of
Datamation contained a
number of spoof articles and humorous stories related to
computers.
However humor was not limited to April. For example, in a spoof
Datamation article (December 1973),
R. Lawrence
Clark suggested that the
GOTO
statementcould be replaced by the
COMEFROM
statement, and provides some entertaining examples. This was
actually implemented in the
INTERCAL programming language,
a language designed to make programs as obscure as possible.
Real Programmers Don't Use
Pascal was a letter to the editor of Datamation, volume 29
number 7, July 1983, written by Ed Post,
Tektronix, Wilsonville, Oregon
, USA.
Some of
BOFH were reprinted in
Datamation.
The humor section was resurrected in 1996 with a two-page spread
titled "Over the Edge" with material contributed by
Annals of Improbable
Research editor
Marc Abrahams
and
MISinformation editor Chris Miksanek. Later that year,
Miksanek became the sole humor contributor (though in 1998 "Over
the Edge" was augmented with an online weblinks companion by
Miksanek's
alter-ego "
The Duke of URL"). The column was dropped
from the magazine in 2001 when it was acquired by
Internet.com.
A collection of "Over the Edge" columns was published in 2008 under
the title "Esc: 400 Years of Computer Humor" (ISBN
1434892484).
Misc
One other humor item may be worth a mention, just because of the
participation of a major figure in the industry. In 1978
"Datamation" published a piece called
Excuse me, what was
that? that documented a
Today Show interview by Tom
Brokaw of John Peers, who was demonstrating his company's speech
recognition system. When that system didn't recognize a phrase, it
would respond "Excuse me, what was that?" In the excitement of
setup for the demo, the system was overtrained, so everything
sounded the same to it, and every few seconds during the interview,
it would repeat that phrase, driving interviewer and interviewee
nuts. George Glaser, one of the proprietors of the system was
present. On hands and knees, he crept behind the equipment, hoping
not to be seen on national television, intending to stop the
distraction by yanking some wires. Brokaw had the presence of mind
to switch the machine off before George came into view. Datamation
illustrated the piece with an excellent caricature of the scene,
showing the distinguished Mr. Glaser creeping under the rug. The
story got a lot of attention, and George told me that he was later
introduced at an important meeting as "The Lump Under the Carpet."
--Nels Winkless
References