I have been interested in computers since my early teens, some years before i actually got to use one.
I don't remember quite how I first became interested.
I do remember that it was in the early 1960s reading Arthur C. Clarke's Profiles of the Future bought as a paperback after seeing it I think on a bookstall at New Street Station in Birmingham that inspired me that I wanted to be an inventor.
That sort of attitude has shaped my life greatly. I tend to consider ideas even if they at first glance seem ridiculous and I have sometimes found that by looking at them and adding something that something that will work can be found. It is that willingness to suspend disbelief for a while and think and not be dismissive with an annoyed wave of the hand that has helped me enormously. A willingness to be deemed as lacking confidence because I exercise caution before expresing an opinion rather than showing smiling confidence.
Years later, Arthur C. Clarke wrote, I think it might have been in The View from Serendip that in Profiles of the Future (which I think had been in hardback a few years before I saw the paperback version) he had speculated that the first man to walk on the moon might already be alive somewhere as a small boy, and in fact he was already a thirty year old man.
I remember that there was a road between two of the railway platforms at New Street Station and at the time it seemed quite odd to have a road down the middle of a railway station.
Years later, I learned that it had originally been two stations on the same site, for two different railway companies, that had later both become part of the London Midland and Scottish Railway in the railway grouing of 1923.
It is interesting that companies such as LMS and LNER (London and North Eastern Railway) each formed in 1923 only lasted for 25 years until nationalization into British Railways in 1948, yet those 25 years saw the development and use of most of the United Kingdom steam locomotives that are modelled by model railway companies today.
Another book that inspired me at that time was a Pelican paperback book Five Hundred Years of Printing by S. H. Steinberg, and I have been interested in Incunabula ever since.
And in a very large bookshop in Birmingham at that sort of time they had a very comprehensive display of the Teach Yourself series books. Most bookshops had a selection, often the more common ones, like Teach Yourself French and so on. So when I saw Teach Yourself Old English I bought it on the basis that there it was, I might never see that on offer ever again, buy it while I have the opportunity to do so.
Some years later, I was in a bookshop and I wanted to ask a member of staff something and I approached a man who was putting Teach Yourself books in a vertical rotating stand.
He politely explained that he did not work there, he was a representative of Teach Yourself books. We had a discuusion about them. He said that most of them were written as a labour of love by the author of the book. He said that most of the sales were of people who became interested in something, bought a book about it, but never read past the first chapter.
William