Byte (April 1985)

Cover of the April 1985 issue of Byte
You really got your money's worth when you bought an issue of Byte in the 1980s. For only $3.50 per issue (less if you were a subscriber), you got a whopping 500+ pages. And the cover story in April 1985? Artificial Intelligence. Contents of this issue includes:
Features
- Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar: Build The Home Run Control System - The first part of a series on building a home control system using X-10 modules, sensors and a single board computer.
- Coprocessing in Modula-2 - Writing concurrent programs in Modula-2.

Table of Contents from the April 1985 issue of Byte
Themes
- Communication With Alien Intelligence - How we might communicate with aliens from an artificial intelligence perspective.
- The Quest to Understand Thinking - Attempting to understand how the brain works starting with the simplest steps.
- The LISP Tutor - Developing a computer based tutor effective at teaching the LISP programming language.
- PROUST - A knowledge based systems for automatically debugging Pascal programs.
- Architectures for AI - Improving computational throughput for artificial intelligence.
- The LISP Revolution - LISP was the first language primarily used for AI applications. It is still used today though Python and C++ seem to be the main players now.
- The Challenge of Open Systems - In this context, "open systems" refer to systems of interconnected and interdependent computers.

Table of Contents from the April 1985 issue of Byte (continued)
Reviews
- The ITT XTRA - An IBM compatible computer with 256K of RAM, two double-density 5.25" floppy drives, and monochrome display for $2395.
- Insight - A Knowledge System - Review of this rule-based knowledge system for the IBM PC.
Kernel
- Computing At Chaos Manor: Over The Moat - A look at various products including CP/M Utilities, WRITE, dBASE III, Framework, S1 Operating System, Symphony, System Backup, The World Plus, and more.
- BYTE West Coast: Lasers, Office Publishing, and More - A look at products from Canon, Imagen, Interleaf, Kurzwil, Ricoh, Sun Microsystems, Tardis Software, and Xerox.
- BYTE U.K.: New Database Ideas - A look at Frame Theory for use in database management systems.
- BYTE Japan: The Fifth Generation in Japan - A look at the Hitachi S-810 family of vector super computers. The S-810 was the second super computer from Japan and the first from Hitachi. The fastest of them could reach about 630 MFLOPS.
- Editorial: Golfers and Hackers - A comparison of golfing and hacking.
- Microbytes - An IBM PC emulator for Macintosh users; a memory upgrade for the Mac; Microsoft releases C compiler; Zenith releases new portables with backlit LCD displays; Proteon offers 80 megabits per second networking ($8000 per node); and more.

Back cover of the April 1985 issue of Byte
Read more: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress/index.php/2025/08/27/byte-april-1985/
Check out my other Social Media haunts (though most content is links to stuff I posted on Hive or re-posts of stuff originally posted on Hive):
Wordpress: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress
Tumblr: https://www.tumblr.com/blog/darth-azrael
Blogger: https://megalextoria.blogspot.com/
Odyssee: https://odysee.com/@Megalextoria:b
Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-2385054
Daily Motion: https://www.dailymotion.com/Megalextoria
Books I am reading or have recently read:
Red Star Falling by Steve Berry.
A Declaration of the Rights of Magicians by H.G. Parry
The British Are Coming: The War for America, Lexington to Princeton, 1775-1777 by Rick Atkinson
Mine Monero in your browser!
Earn Gridcoin while also helping various scientific projects by sharing your computer's idle CPU time!
AI was not the same back then as it is now. !BBH
would love to read the article on artificial intelligence. Could you share that?
!vote
❌ Daily vote limit reached!
You can use 1 command vote(s) per day.
Try again in 5 hours and 5 minutes! 🗓️
An IBM-compatible computer with 256K RAM, two 5.25" double-density floppy disk drives, and a monochrome display for $2,395.
Time flies so fast, I can't imagine what features computers will have in about ten years' time.
Artificial intelligence seemed far away back then, but today it's everywhere.
https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:ggtlieencodejd6phc7m3ea7/post/3lxt5hxi6vs2h
https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:ggtlieencodejd6phc7m3ea7/post/3lxt5hxi6vs2h
The rewards earned on this comment will go to the author of the blog post.
@darth-azrael, I'm refunding 0.147 HIVE and 0.029 HBD, because there are no comments to reward.