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The
Story so far...
So,
lets go back to the year 1972, when I got a phone call from Denny,
a blind kid who turned me onto a toy whistle he got out of a Cap'n
Crunch cereal box.
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With this whistle, it was possible to access the internal trunking
mechanism of Ma Bell.In conjunction with a blue box (A special
tone generating device), it was possible to take internal control
of Ma Bell's long distance switching equipment. During those
turbulent times, I got hooked up with the People's Computer
Club in Menlo park and took Steve
Wozniak to one of their Pot Luck dinners.
I
met Steve Wozniak at UC Berkeley in the Winter of 1971. He begged
me to come and show him how to use a blue box he just built
from information he obtained from the October 1971 issue of
Esquire magazine "Secrets of the Little Blue Box", and the Bell
System Journals from the UC Library. Woz talked me into visiting
him at the dorm, where he made his famous call to the Pope.
The Woz was working at HP at the time, and I brought him to
a pot luck dinner hosted my PCC (People's Computer Company).
Shortly after that, these pot luck dinners evolved into the
Home
Brew Computer Club
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A few months later Intel announced the 8080 Microprocessor chip. Steve
Wozniak got his hands on some 6502 chips and built the first 6502
computer that eventually became the Apple I. |
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Naturally,
neither the phone companies or the authorities took kindly to my
blue box "experiments"
I was performing on their equipment, so they tracked me down and
filed charges, convicting me under Title 18, Section 1343 : Fraud
by wire. While serving time, I got sentenced to a "Work Furlough"
program, and was allowed to continue my programming work. I wrote
the first word processor for the Apple II computer, which was the
first word processor that printed in true proportional spacing on
the Qume printer, provided to me by Steve Wozniak, the founder of
Apple Computer.
At
that time, I called the program "TextWriter" until Steve Sawyer
suggested the name "EasyWriter"
after seeing the movie "Easy Rider". The name stuck... Thus was
born the FIRST word processor for the Apple II. In 1980, IBM was
sneaking around, looking for an outside company to port their word
processor to their new machine. At this time, I had my "Cap'n Software"
company. IBM contacted us to port our word processor to their new
machine. The rest is history.
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The
device I'm holding in my hand is just a Radio Shack Touch Tone dialer,
these look just like blue boxes. A blue box has a dial like the one
I'm holding, except it has an additional button which sends a 2600
Hz tone. This clears down the original call, and opens up a trunk
that "Listens" for these special audible tones. A "Cap'n Crunch" whistle
does nothing more than send a 2600 Hz tone or note. In the late 60's
and Early 70's, all toll trunks were sensitive to this tone. This
is because ATT Long lines did a fatal cost cutting measure, they designed
the system so that signaling and voice used the same circuit. Problem
was that it literally opened up the phone companies internal dial
circuits to anyone with a "blue box". Today, the phone companies no
longer do this. Signaling takes place on a separate path from the
one you talk on. Sending 2600 Hz tone down the line usually results
in nothing. |
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