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Don Lancaster

American writer and engineer (died 2023) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Donald E. Lancaster was an American author, inventor, and microcomputer pioneer.[1]

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Early life

Don graduated from North Allegheny High School in Wexford, Pennsylvania.[2] He received a BSEE degree[3] from Lafayette College in 1961, and a MSEE from Arizona State University in 1967.[4] While attending ASU, Lancaster started on a master's degree in anthropology, but he never earned the degree.[3]

Career

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Lancaster was an engineer,[5] at Goodyear Aerospace in Phoenix, Arizona, who also wrote multiple articles for computer and electronics magazines of the 1970s, including Popular Electronics, Radio-Electronics, Dr. Dobb's Journal, 73 Magazine, and Byte. He has written books on electronics, computers, and entrepreneurship, both commercially published and self-published.[1]

One of his early projects was "TV Typewriter" serial terminal.[1] The design was accepted by early microcomputer users as it used an ordinary television set for the display and could be built for around USD$200 in parts, at a time when commercial terminals were selling for over $1,000.

Lancaster was an early advocate and developer of what is now known as print-on-demand technology. Lancaster produced his self-published books by re-purposing the game port of an Apple II to transfer PostScript code directly to a laser printer, rather than using a Macintosh running PageMaker. This enabled continuous book production using an inexpensive Apple II, rather than tying up an expensive Macintosh until the print run was complete.

He formerly held a ham radio license (K3BYG).[6]

On June 7, 2023, at the age of 83, Lancaster died, having lived for 44 years in Thatcher, Arizona.[3]

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Publications

IC books
  • RTL Cookbook (1ed, 1969) (3ed, 2010, ISBN 0-672-20715-X, archive)
  • TTL Cookbook (1ed, 1974, ISBN 0-672-21035-5, archive)
  • CMOS Cookbook (1ed, 1977) (4ed, 2019, ISBN 0-672-21398-2, archive)
  • Active Filter Cookbook (1ed, 1975) (2ed, 1995, ISBN 0-75062986-X, archive)
Project books
Apple books
Programming books
Other
  • The Incredible Secret Money Machine (1978) ISBN 0-672-21562-4
  • The Incredible Secret Money Machine II (1978) ISBN 978-1-882193-12-7
  • Book-On-Demand Resource Kit
  • The Case Against Patents: Selected Reprints from "Midnight Engineering" & "Nuts & Volts" Magazines (Synergetics Press, January 1996). Paperback ISBN 1-882193-71-7

References

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