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Mycro-Tek President Stan Brannan became President of Python Tools and is now a Director of Neovest. Mycro-Tek, Inc. Press for Jim Green's resume PROFILE.Press for Jim Green's resume PROFILE.
Mycro-Tek, Inc., Wichita, Kansas (Photo: Founder Stan Brannan)|| Translation
* Project Engineer, 08/1985-11/1986, 01/1978-04/1982.

During my 2nd stint at Mycro-Tek I devised a 68020 VME CPU card prototype with a floppy disk drive, an SCSI port, 1 Mb serial I/O channels, and incorporating an IBM keyboard interface for the AIM interactive graphics workstation developed to replace the AdComp as a display ad terminal. Eventually this pilot card was replaced with an economical mass-produced Motorola CPU card specified by another engineer, Larry Runyan. I also designed the video system card for the AIM system, which included a 1024x800 display with 8 shades of grey, a grey-scale pallette, and a double-buffered architecture for picture or cursor animation. My demonstration of the animation capability included flying flamingos and a quilt of eagles. I wrote a 10K graphics software package written in 68020 assembler language to test the hardware. This software package was composed on a VAX/VMS and on a VERSADOS system. In addition, I wrote a program to compute video timing parameters in C for different choices of screen pixel density. The display was capable of higher resolution, to 1248x1024, using the same monitor used on SUN workstations. It was offered with software for display ad composition in a newspaper environment. The 1024x800 pixel density was appropriate for a pixel-per-point font presentation, giving a fair representation of of the distance between baselines of type on a digital monitor. A software team led by Greg Yarnell developed the application software for the system in C using structured design techniques and a character data-base cache method to support a large number of character sizes and fonts on the graphic display. I helped to demonstrate the AIM system at trade shows and some units were sold. Higher-speed versions of the 68020 were considered for still higher performance.

Earlier, I developed the hardware and software for an 8086-based interactive graphic system, the ADCOMP display ad composition terminal. A patent was awarded to me for the character generation technique. It was my job to design the version of the 8086 card that went into the product, and also the Multibus RAM and PROM cards, and the digital video card with two area cursors and a cross-hair cursor. The original composition system was written and perfected by myself and Lisa Powell, who was responsible for testing. After I left the project Lisa went on with Mike Christianson to enhance the product. Software accretions slowed the machine down, and the next version, the AIM system based on the 68020 described in the preceding section, was more ergonomical, faster, and more attractively packaged.

Lisa Powell was obliquely memorialized by Apple, which came out subsequently with LISAs to remind us about sharing credit. Many system concepts came from Harris and Zenotron. Numerous Mycro-Tek staffers contributed useful concepts (including Kenny Castor in Sales) and the AdComp was an exciting product in those days. It was for a time the most profitable piece of equipment Mycro-Tek produced, per unit. The net volume in the more conservative editing system for newspapers developed by leading lights Stan Brannan, Larry Runyan, and Steve Markel was more impressive. AdComp sales probably amounted to several million dollars.

Also, I developed Multibus dynamic RAM cards with and without error detection and correction, and a Z80-based micro-winchester disk interface with DMA. A Multibus EEPROM card was developed by me, together with the printed circuit artwork. I used PAL logic, and did state machine design. Also, I prepared research papers on disk drives, operating systems, and developed a proposal complete with detailed schematics for a 68000-based system with a custom memory management unit to support UNIX.

In addition, I developed advanced software for print shops, featuring a counting keyboard program, and an automatic hyphenation and justification program. Our first project was a small program to count keyboard keystrokes. It was used to compute all the keystrokes compositors would make while doing difficult composition jobs. Later, I developed a translator for reformatting the word processing input of the system into paginated text. Finally, I wrote a smart editor with horizontal scrolling and other advanced features, and copy-fitting software. These were large programs that were installed at several sites. Mycro-Tek marketed this system for print shops nationally, although it was never as profitable as our system for newspapers.

I wrote some PLM/86 test software before leaving, and studied the C programming language in connection with a company proposal for installing UNIX on a hypothetical new system. This new system included a design by me, under Vice-President of R&D Larry Runyan's supervision, for a complete 68000-based system card set, including a custom MMU, memory, and peripheral interface cards. It never got into production because our salesmen decided that UNIX was not user-friendly enough for our newspaper market.

Instead I went to Kreonite after the sale of Mycro-Tek to Allied Chemical to work on a system for scanning and printing color photographs and proposed a color retouching terminal capable of zooming and panning over very large high-resolution color images with offset registers for horizonal and vertical scrolling. We also considered flat-bed scanner designs proposed by Dwight Krehbeil, who held 51% of Mycro-Tek's stock at the time the company was sold. I note that Jim Dawson of Printing Inc., one of our best customers, used to promote us at Mycro-Tek as "the wizards of Washington Street", because at first our offices were located on Washington Street not far from downtown.

(INTEL Chips and systems: 8086, 8080, Zilog Z80 assembly languages, PLM/86. Digital hardware design, microprocessor applications, digital video systems, programmable logic design.)

The Mycro-Tek Building on Greenwich Road near Colonel James Jabara Comotara Airport in 1986. Jim Green and The Association of Old Crows.
Crow of Power: The Teachings of Don Juan.
Crow Empire
The Mycro-Tek Building on Greenwich Road near James Jabara Comotara Airport in 1986.
The company had come a long way from Washington Street downtown,
where it was located when I joined it in 1977 with an MSEE from WSU.

See also Silverspot, The Story of a Crow who collected a tea cup handle
(the gem of his collection), shells, and pebbles as if they were web links.

Also see The Association of Old Crows and Old Crows Empire Chapter.
One of my popular WSU electronics professors, Dr. Norris, belonged to
The Association of Old Crows and displayed its insignia in his office.
As a graduate student, I delivered an advanced paper on electronic countermeasures at a
WSU IEEE meeting dealing with adaptive array antennas with null-steering for anti-jamming.


After my second tour of duty at Mycro-Tek, I moved on to Honeywell Defense Communications in Tampa, Florida. Press for Photo Gallery.Crow surfing a wave of history. Play 'Key Largo' {6}.
Surfing Waves of History. Next: a return to Tampa Bay in 1987,
where I had worked at Alphatype/Berthold and ABA Electromechanical Systems
near Largo, later rechristened General Defense and Radiation Systems.
Mycro-Tek went Chapter 11 in 1993 as ink jet printers replaced typesetters and as Microsoft general-purpose software running in Windows on standard PCs replaced special-purpose workstations.


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