LaserWriter 种子系列
LaserWriter seeds

原始链接: https://inventingthefuture.ghost.io/laserwriter-seeds/

20世纪70年代,施乐帕罗奥多研究中心(Xerox PARC)的研究人员解决了从计算机打印高质量文档的难题,为现代桌面出版奠定了基础。由于Alto计算机缺乏处理海量位图影像的能力,工程师们开发了EARS系统。通过利用研究字符生成器(RCG)来处理相关任务,团队将计算负担从主机上转移了出来,这成为了现代打印机架构的前身。 作为补充,所见即所得的“Bravo”文字处理器的诞生,让用户能够在屏幕上设计文档,而“Press”页面描述语言则能高效地格式化这些复杂文件。尽管取得了这些开创性的进展,施乐的管理层却没能把握住分布式个人计算生态系统的潜力。他们没有推广Alto/EARS模式,而是将这项技术包装成了一款庞大且昂贵的独立工业打印机。虽然这带来了可观的收入,但施乐“想象力的匮乏”让计算领域的真正未来——包括麦金塔电脑(Macintosh)、Microsoft Word和Adobe——最终被其他公司摘取。帕罗奥多研究中心卓越的研究人员最终证明:技术知识固然至关重要,但如果没有实施它的远见,依然是不足够的。

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原文

As the Homebrew Computer Club met and MITS frantically shipped Altairs, researchers at Xerox PARC were seemingly a decade or more ahead. They already knew what would make personal computers useful, and researchers were working on an ecosystem to support a typical office task. Writing and printing documents. 

Gary Starkweather had tested his SLOT laser printer using analog signals, flying-spot scanners, and raw binary test patterns to prove it was capable of high-quality printing. The next hurdle was to print a document directly from a computer, however, a letter-size bitmap page contains millions of pixels, and the Alto did not have the memory or processing power to construct and manipulate such page images efficiently. 

In previous years, the same task; high-quality printing was achieved with powerful graphics workstations that were able to process large bitmaps. The answer was to move the processing off the host computer. 

Xerox engineer Ron Rider built a hardware controller called the Research Character Generator (RCG), to operate directly between the Alto and the laser printer. The RCG contained its own dedicated, high-speed digital memory (RAM/ROM) where font characters were stored as small, localized bitmaps. The Xerox team added a basic text-printing utility called Ear and a hand-coded typeface called Ben to the Alto. Then they sent a test to the RCG. Once it received character data, the RCG would look up an individual letter in its hardwired memory grid, find the correct sequence of 1s and 0s, and tell the laser precisely when to pulse. 

The ad-hoc system, which became known as EARS (for Ethernet, Alto, Research Character Generator, and SLOT), had unblocked the printing hardware bottleneck at Xerox. But it did much more. It was a direct precursor to how, a decade later, Apple solved its own logjam with the LaserWriter and the Macintosh. Furthermore, the constraints of using hardwired bitmapped fonts became the catalyst for the creation of Adobe Systems.

In the early EARS tests, the Alto had sent a raw text file to the printer, so the next step was sending a bitmap document, and to do that required a word processing application for document creation. PARC researchers Charles Simonyi and Butler Lampson created Bravo, which allowed Alto users to mix fonts, styles, and images in a single document, viewing it onscreen exactly as it would later appear on paper. Pundit Jimmy Maher explains the seminal work:

‘It was now possible to use a variety of pleasing proportional fonts to replace the ugly old fixed-width characters of the line printers, to include non-English characters like umlauts and accents, to add charts, graphs, decorative touches like borders, even pictures.’  

While the early EARS tests had succeeded in printing a few lines of characters, the visual sophistication (and density) of Bravo documents pushed the millions of pixel printing problem to the limit. To keep Bravo from choking the system, PARC scientists Bob Sproull and William Newman responded by creating a page description language (PDL) called Press. While the text print utility Ear had instructed the RCG to print characters, Press described an entire page. It bundled all of a document's layout and vector information into a compact file and sent it to the RCG. It was a paradigm-busting concept that meant the intensive task of converting huge bitmap files could be moved away from the host desktop computer and done entirely on external, faster hardware.

Now, an Alto user could compose a rich document in Bravo, hit print, and watch the Press file move over Metcalfe's Ethernet to the RCG, which translated it into a real-time electronic bitstream for the SLOT laser printer.

While the entire EARS setup still resembled a mainframe in size and was too expensive to scale commercially, the Xerox researchers knew this was a temporary hurdle of Moore's Law. Inside PARC, the ecosystem was an undeniable triumph. Starkweather adds:

‘This machine was put in place at PARC, hooked into the system and over the next year and a half printed four million copies and everyone connected the network to it. We were doing network printing from our own computers, and it was a raging success.’  

Meanwhile, Xerox executives in Connecticut saw the EARS system not as a distributed personal computing prototype, but merely as a high-end standalone product they could sell to their existing corporate market. Xerox bundled a modified 9200 copier frame with a laser unit inside, drove it with a DEC PDP-11/34 as the print controller, and launched it as the 9700 Electronic Printing System. Wall Street Journal journalist James Hagerty wrote:

‘When introduced, the 9700 occupied as much space as five or six washing machines, weighed more than a ton and was priced at $295,000. It became one of the company’s top-selling products, generating more than $1 billion of annual revenue.’

The sales figures appeared to vindicate the decision by Xerox product marketing. However, the true potential of network computing architecture was missed. The opportunity of the Alto was passed to the Macintosh, Press (the InterPress) was exploited by PostScript and Bravo split into Microsoft Word and Aldus PageMaker. 

Gary Starkweather later recalled:

‘I’ll never forget Einstein’s quote that “Imagination is more important than knowledge.” I think that it’s interesting because many of the failures I later saw in Xerox, and other companies, was a failure of imagination, not a failure of knowledge.’

That failure of imagination ultimately drove the scientists and the future of computing out of PARC. 

Excerpt from https://books.by/john-buck/inventing-the-future

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