Today while at work, I was going through a few boxes left behind by a not-so-successful manager
who ended his employement with us about two and a half years ago. There wasn't much in these boxes
really; out of date computing magazines, printed manuals for software we use here that were
versions behind, an old Linux book which covered Slackware v2, and probably the most useful
things: a few steno pads that only had a few pages used out of them.
Out of all this garbage did come one gem:
A book published in 1988 by a man (I'm assuming) named Richard Hull, entitled: "Microcomputer Administration - How to Plan for Organize and Control Microcomputers in Your Company"
(For those of you who find yourself reading the title over to yourself because it doesn't sound right, the lack of punctuation is the way it's printed throughout the book.)
The book covers many interesting points of pre-1990s computing, but the piece I wanted to show you today is a Microcomputer Mainenance Checklist. Enjoy!


Out of all this garbage did come one gem:
A book published in 1988 by a man (I'm assuming) named Richard Hull, entitled: "Microcomputer Administration - How to Plan for Organize and Control Microcomputers in Your Company"
(For those of you who find yourself reading the title over to yourself because it doesn't sound right, the lack of punctuation is the way it's printed throughout the book.)
The book covers many interesting points of pre-1990s computing, but the piece I wanted to show you today is a Microcomputer Mainenance Checklist. Enjoy!


