“The combination of the LaserWriter, PostScript, PageMaker and the Mac’s GUI and built-in AppleTalk networking would ultimately create desktop publishing.” (page 84). Today, everyone is a publisher. To read is to print. To download is to copy. Copies are stored and retrieved. Sources are cited. This is how we got here. History of Desktop Publishing by Frank Romano is a narrative catalog. The story ends just before now and suggests some of the probable next generation of media, means, and methods.
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| From The Rational Optimist by Matt Ridley |
By the standards of the past in the time before the Renaissance in Italy any improvement from the first typewriter could have sustained three generations over a century and today we would be enjoying the first teletypes in our homes. In science fiction we call that subgenre Steampunk: life in 2000 as seen from 1865. But that is not what happened. Instead, we have experienced a rapid evolution of tools for thinking and for the communication of those thoughts.
In the human lifetime after individual letters in lead type were no longer pulled from job cases and placed in composition sticks, type met ink and paper via keys, wheels, balls, film images, and matrices of 7, 9, or 24 striking wires. Ink was and is blown through magnets or fixed by electrical charges or by heat or both or chemical reaction with the paper and air.
Storage evolved through magnetic tape on large reels and small cassettes, floppy disks (first large and then soon smaller and denser), driven by direct friction contact or floating on a cushion of air. Semiconductor memory arrays are still mounted on the computer motherboard while others are conveniently removable even to be carried on a keychain.
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The genius of these rapid intellectual achievements, is exactly that many of them were incremental and just as many were truly new attempts to solve the same problems of transmitting ideas by giving permanent form to words.
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| In the 12th grade, his guidance counselor sent him to Mergenthaler to seek a job interview. Romano went with a classmate. Frank got the job but his classmate did not. |
Frank Romano has a lot of good visibility as the historian of modern printing. Modern printing needed his formal investigations and detailed reports because the evolution was so rapid. Gordon Moore’s Law (observation) is that overall commonly available computing power has and will double every 2.5 years. “Moore’s Law is Dead” is a meme that asserts changes in the dimensions of understanding of the tools themselves. One path is that the changes are much greater; another is that they cease.
Fortunately for us, Frank Romano is not alone and his Museum of Printing in Havehill, Massachusetts, is one of several institutions that preserve the tools, techniques, and traditions of the arts and sciences that instantiate and transubstantiate our thoughts across time and space.
- Museum of Printing
- 15 Thornton Avenue, Haverhill, MA 01832
- The Museum of Printing is dedicated to preserving the rich history of the graphic arts, printing and typesetting technology, and printing craftsmanship.
The collection contains hundreds of antique printing, typesetting, and bindery machines, as well as a library of books and printing-related documents.
A unique holding is the Mergenthaler Font Library, the original drawings that were the starting point for manufacturing matrices for Linotype machines. Other font libraries are those for the Intertype Photosetter and the remains of the font library of the Photon Corporation (after the unfortunate destruction of much of this resource). - The Museum will also become the home for the archives of the TUGboat editor, including many items related to TeX and to the typography of mathematics.
- Providence Public Library Special Collections
- The Updike Collection on the History of Printing
- 150 Empire Street, Providence, RI 02903
- Daniel Berkeley Updike was proprietor of the Merrymount Press in Boston.
- In addition to thousands of books (among them many early type specimen books), prints, ephemera, and some artifacts (including the matrices for the Montallegro and Merrymount types, commissioned by Mr. Updike for his own use), the collection includes Mr. Updike’s personal correspondence from 1878 to his death in 1941.
- An annual event is the Updike Prize for Student Type Design
- For more information, call +1 (401) 455-8021.
- It is best to plan ahead and make arrangements to see this collection.
- Rochester Institute of Technology
- Cary Graphic Arts Collection
- 90 Lomb Memorial Drive, Rochester, NY 14623-5604, USA
Phone: (585) 475-3961
Fax: (585) 475-6900 - Dedicated to graphic communication history and practices, this library is included in the curriculum of several courses offered by RIT's College of Imaging Arts and Sciences.
- Among the holdings is the most substantial collection in America on the work of Hermann Zapf, who held the Melbert B. Cary Distinguished Professorship at RIT from 1977-1987.
- They have many videos posted on their YouTube channel, including a tour of the press room and use of their Goudy printing press.
- Stanford University Library
- Information about opening hours and library locations can be found here.
- Department of Special Collections
- Donald E Knuth papers, 1962-2015 - Held offsite; must be reserved at least 48 hours in advance.











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