I remember Olivetti PCs from the late 80s to 90s. They were beautifully designed -- not SGI or Sun beautiful -- but beautiful for PCs. I like the "grate" design.
I worked at Olivetti's Advanced Technology Labs in Cupertino until 1989. We were really making some wonderful stuff then, but the company itself was having trouble, and some scandals. The executive staff were always being arrested for one thing or another (see https://www.nytimes.com/1993/11/03/world/accused-olivetti-ch... for example).
We paid more attention to cases, fasteners, and design than most other clone vendors.
I left out of frustration and joined a little company that put a stack-based programming language inside laser printers.
Oh, the memories! Great thing was the keyboard, gave the user certain assurance and stability, not sure how would I explain it but those of you who used these, would instantly know what I mean.
The keyboard with the strongest psychological boost I've ever experienced is the M0116 Apple Standard Keyboard https://deskthority.net/wiki/Apple_Standard_Keyboardhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hY7XXo5uEZI with its old ALPS (Orange, or sometimes Salmon) switches. Every time you press a few keys the little voice in your head tells you (accurately or not!) "Yes, I have accomplished something meaningful. Significant work is being done here." It's really quite self-defeating that Apple can't find the pocket change necessary to bring back Apple keyboards with early ALPS switches, especially now that it's relatively serious about desktop computing again. Things could be a lot worse though: seven years after introducing the M0116 Apple put out the M2980 Apple "Design" "Keyboard" https://deskthority.net/wiki/AppleDesign_Keyboard which could leave you pining for death.
I have an M24 too, and what I find interesting is that there are different keyboard designs for the Italian layout, including one with the “typewriter” letter layout (with “m” being at the end of the home row) and the 00 key in the numpad, in addition to the 0.
My first PC was an Olivetti Prodest PC1, and it felt a natural design back then coming from the "wedge" design of the 8 and 16 bit machines of the time, as in "the computer is the keyboard".
The IBM PS/1 was the machine I coveted for its beauty, but it was overpriced and underspecced when I could finally think about one; so a generic beige 386-40 it was.
The Valentine is famous among the designers, but the truly popular model is the Lettera 22[1]: many journalists and writers, famous or not, used it, and of course it had a hipster revival. (Also a beautiful machine.)
the thing i like most about these is that, though normally they're executing their machine code from the keyboard like a normal calculator, the 'v', 'w', 'y', and 'z' keys jump to user-defined machine code addresses and start executing code from memory. i think that's an inspiring way to provide an application with programmable function keys on a really extremely limited computer, far too small for even forth
The best thing I know about Olivetti, is that nearby my city, there is a small village, where there are houses, schools, nurseries, etc. and Olivetti production centers, where Olivetti's employees were living, it is a great concept to be an innovative company, but also really think about the wellbeing of your employees, that is now lost, now they maybe give you a pizza, some ping pong, and as soon as you're not useful, you're just discarded, the american system is a disgrace
Olivetti also owned Acorn Computer, inventor of the ARM processor, although Dave began a good few years before they bought it. Apparently the project was so secret that Olivetti didn’t know about it until the purchase was complete.
Somewhat related: Steve Job's 1983 talk at Aspen design conference (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8Q7gXwavUU) where he argues that all good designers are now busy with automobiles and buildings and no one is looking at personal computers.
Still have one of those tucked away at my father’s place. He used to use it at the beginning of his career to run calculations for engineering structural computations before Acca and other similar softwares (in Italy due to very active seismic activity you need to run these sorts of calculations also for very small structures).
In 1966, we had one in the Stuyvesant HS computer room, along with an IBM 1130 system that ran Fortran 4. I got good at the Programma, it was quite useful. But I don’t recall 240 steps; I recall less than 100. Indeed, the much more advanced HP 9100 circa 1968, with CRT, rpn, and 10-digit accuracy, had only 196.
Back in the 80s, having their typewriters allowing you to delete the last 4 characters was cutting-edge material. Then a tiny screen was a 'wow moment'.
I just finished reading Empire of the Sum: The Rise and Reign of the Pocket Calculator, which describes the Programma and many of its contemporaries. Highly recommended reading if you're interested in the history of calculating machines and how they intersect with computers.
At least Italy is still interesting when it comes to software development. Unlike Japan which had a good start but it is not that good anymore (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ky1nGQhHTso)
> At least Italy is still interesting when it comes to software development.
Do you have an example ? Doesn't look to me like there is that much great software written in Italy. If you ask me the only thing that comes to my mind right now is antirez and Redis, but then the same can be said about Japan (Matz and Ruby)
the history of p101 from one of the creators: https://archive.org/details/programma101.
It's a fascinating reading (sorry, Italian language, hire google for help..), directly from the source, about those years when a new world was born, full of big promises and incredible mistakes. Olivetti is still a case study in economy and management.
The way I heard the story, Olivetti management had planned on naming their new Z8000-based machine the "M16", for 16-bits, and luckily a few americans were able to convince them that, in at least one non-italian country, this syntactic space was already occupied.
(these days it seems it may take some bubble-wrangling to convince uncle Google that when I type "t3x" I want, not Tikka, but NMH)
Olivetti was amazing but they got screwed by the Italian government. Basically executive positions were imposed by Italian politics so you ended up with an amazing company with a bunch of scumbags at the top siphoning up all the profits.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/325569104545
The IBM PS/2 Model 30 was also quite beautiful
https://www.computinghistory.org.uk/userdata/images/large/56...