World's
Longest-Using WordPerfect Author Abandons WordPerfect After 30 Years
by
Gary North
Recently
by Gary North: Big
Mouth Dolts at the Tea Party
The story
of WordPerfect illustrates the history of microcomputing, and how
a dominant company that fails to keep up with technology fades into
the sunset. Price competition erodes its profitability. Rival products
keep getting more powerful and cheaper -- even free. A younger generation
of users ignores the old brand, and existing users either die off
or switch when a new generation of cheaper, better software appears.
My story illustrates
this relentless process. I held out longer than anyone else.
I began using
WordPerfect 1.0 in late 1980, within a month or two of its release.
The program was produced by Satellite Software International (S.S.I.).
The last time that I used a typewriter to write a book was in July
1980. Since then, I have written over 40 volumes. I have also written
something in the range of 2,000 newsletters and articles using WordPerfect.
(The 7,000+ articles on GaryNorth.com
I wrote mainly with my site's program.)
For my books,
I was still using WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS until late last year,
when my 1995 Dell computer finally died.
I did my own
book typesetting after 1989. I used WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS until
1999, and WordPerfect 8 for Windows thereafter.
When I began,
WordPerfect 1.0 sold for 7,500 1980 U.S. dollars, or so I recall
in the range of $19,000 today. I still have the manual. It is
under 40 pages, printed out in dot matrix. The program ran on a
used $25,000 Data General minicomputer, which required a $600 a
month service contract. Multiply these figures by 2.5.
I typed in
my office. The wires to the computer ran across the street alongside
the city's electrical wires (illegal, I suppose) to a house where
the computer was. Primitive? You bet!
The typewriter
was far cheaper. Early adapters overpay. But I got used to using
WordPerfect, and that shaped the next 30 years of my career.
The I.B.M.
PC appeared in August 1981. It sold for under $2,000. I did not
buy one until late 1982, as soon as WordPerfect 2.20 was made available
for the IBM PC. It sold for $495. I immediately bought an IBM PC
and a copy of WordPerfect. It was better than S.S.I., though basically
the same.
I got rid of
the Data General. So did everyone else. The era of the minicomputer
was ending.
The big breakthrough
in version 2.20 was the use of the IBM function keys. That made
the program a writer's delight. It was designed for function keys
down the left, where they belong. I became addicted to WordPerfect
and the clickety-clack keyboard. When the industry shifted to function
keys across the top, I dug in. I have collected nine PC AT keyboards.
I hope at least one will outlast me.

WordPerfect
was the dominant word processor in the 1980s. In the 1990s, Word
for Windows overtook it. In this century, WordPerfect became a niche
product.
It has one
overwhelming advantage. On request, it lets you see the control
codes on a page. You can repair things that don't look right or
act right. That feature keeps Corel's WordPerfect X5 in the running.
But at $55
from Amazon, it is not a very profitable product.
In the 1980s,
there was a cottage industry: publishing 600-page manuals on popular
programs. The Dummies books empire began with DOS
for Dummies. Today, there are few such manuals. The software
firms offer a short PDF file to print out.
Everything
relies on the Help files. These are incomplete. They are
not a major focus of attention by the companies. Techies are not
committed to producing beta-tested Help files and then making continual
revisions.
Read
the rest of the article
February
22, 2011
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2011 Gary North
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