The Esther Dyson papers are comprised of material Dyson collected from 1974 to 2001, with the bulk of material from 1980 to 1996, related to her work analyzing and making projections on emerging technologies, her industry newsletter Release 1.0, and her venture capitalism firm EDventure Holdings.
The largest part of the collection contains material related to various topics, companies, and products that reflect Dyson’s venture capitalism and interest in the computer and software industry. A smaller but significant part of the collection relates to Dyson’s industry-analyst newsletter Release 1.0 and its Eastern European-focused sister publication Rel-EAST, including edited drafts of the newsletters and material used for research on the subjects, products, and companies she wrote about. The smallest part of the collection consists of books, manuals, periodicals, and computer industry conference proceedings and workbooks that are focused on computer technology, software, programming, and development.
Biographical/Historical Note
Esther Dyson was born July 14, 1951, in Zürich, Switzerland, to physicist Freeman Dyson and mathematician Verena Huber-Dyson. At age 16, Dyson was accepted to Harvard University, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in economics in 1972. After graduation, she went to work at Forbes as a fact-checker and then reporter from 1974 to 1977. In 1977, she started working as a Wall Street securities analyst for New Court Securities (later called Rothschild) and then Oppenheimer and Company, specializing in high-tech and software companies.
In 1982, Dyson began working with Rosen Research firm and its founder, venture capitalist Ben Rosen. The next year, she bought the firm from Rosen, which included the newsletter Rosen’s Electronic News and the annual PC Forum conference. She renamed the firm EDventure Holdings and the newsletter Release 1.0, and began organizing PC Forum, which she helmed each year until its last conference in 2006. After Dyson took it over, PC Forum was considered one of the premier conferences in the technology industry.
Dyson published Release 1.0 from 1983 through 2006, with a break in 1985 when she accepted an offer to edit Ziff-Davis’ short-lived newsletter Computer Industry Daily (CID), which only lasted a few months. Release 1.0 focused on Dyson’s analysis and projections of emerging technologies, and the software and technology industries. As a paid-subscription publication, Release 1.0 had a fairly small readership but its subscribers were considered highly influential in the industry. With EDventure Holdings, Dyson has invested in technology start-ups, more recently focusing on health care and aerospace. In the late 1980s, she started investing in Eastern and Central European technology ventures. She was an early investor in Flickr, Evernote, Medstory, and Square, and was active in the sale of Flickr to Yahoo! and Medstory to Microsoft.
In the 1990s, Dyson became involved in internet public policy. She chaired several organizations, including the National Information Infrastructure Advisory Council (NIIAC) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), and she was a founding chair of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN).
Dyson’s book, Release 2.0: A Design for Living in the Digital Age, was published in 1997, and she has written columns for the New York Times, ZDNet, Project Syndicate, the Guardian, Content magazine, and other publications. Dyson sold EDventure Holdings, Release 1.0, and PC Forum to CNET Networks in 2004. She left CNET three years later, but has continued to work under the EDventure Holdings name. She also sits on the boards of several companies and nonprofits.
Includes GTE promotional material and publications and also an ACM SIGMOD 1987 tutorial titled "Automating Database Design and Development" by Michael L. Brodie. The database tutorial seems unrelated to the GTE material, but they were filed and labeled under GTE prior to donation.
The Reality Club was founded by John Brockman, a literary agent. It originally consisted of regular meetings, of intellectuals across a broad spectrum of fields, in various places in New York City, from 1981 to 1996. One of the members presented at each meeting. There were three books published in 1988-1990 with contents from the meetings, with a letter from Brockman to Ms. Dyson, dated 11-03-1988, commenting on the first review for the first collection, a solicitation for essays for the second edition, and his vision for the club. From 1997 on it has been a web based publication maintained by the Edge Foundation (edge.org). The website is not well maintained but also has some archival material. Brockman authored a book, Digerati, about many of the leading players, and thinkers, at the beginning of the Internet. The website has a section with a page for each of these Digerati, Ms. Dyson being one. The folder contains many very interesting references: an early correspondence apparently sent to new prospective members (invitation only club) listing the programs from inception in January 1981 to April 1982 and a membership list which includes several recognizable names; a brief memorial on the death of Abbie Hoffman by Paul Krassner, both members; an April 1989 edition of a monthly publication "The jamais vu papers"; a letter to members, dated 10-04-1989, listing new members, including Ms. Dyson's brother George Dyson, as a noted kayak designer, and information about the formation of the Edge Foundation as a non-profit to operate the club; a first draft of a newsletter intended for publication, dated 06-18-1990, sent to Ms. Dyson; a folder containing a proposal for the book series including history of the club, and the books, plus the proposed themes, article titles and authors, of the first three volumes; a promotional piece for George Dyson's talk of 5-3-1990, titled "Baidarka: The Skin Boat as a Frame of Mind."
These folders contain material from the Personal Computer Market Seminar (Dallas, 1982); International Winter Consumer Electronics Show (Las Vegas, 1983); National Computer Conference (Las Vegas, 1984); Success in Software conference (Palo Alto, 1984); Business Week conference (New York, 1989); Apple Systems Software Press Seminar (1989); and Pen-Based Computing Conference (Boston, 1992).
Includes documents:
Programming Prolog
Visual interactive programming : a visual programming language for the Macintosh computer
Read me first : join me for a fun tour of Actor