Title
Brown, Derrick oral history
Catalog Number
102792804
Type
Document
Description
Derrick Brown and his family grew up on an 80-acre farm in rural South Carolina. He first discovered computers at his school in 1982 using a remote mainframe was used to recommend career options for high school students. Although he wanted to be a writer, the system recommended a technical field, like electrical engineering, as well. His Mom bought an Apple IIe computer for him at home, an enormous expense for the family at that time but one which put in him the minority of residents in his neighborhood. Brown attended a summer program at Clemson University for bright rural students, which was a very formative experience. He decided to study electrical engineering there and graduated in December 1991.
For graduate school he went to Georgia Tech and was an important member of the Black Graduate Student Association (BGSA). At about the same time, he created, with Alou Macalou, the Universal Black Pages, a search engine and directory where all the reviews of sites would be written by real people. Later he would lead founding of Project CHIP, which put used computers into underserved communities. Brown now teaches geometry at the high school level.
Date
2022-12-20
Contributor
Brown, Derrick, Interviewee
|
McIlwain, Charlton, Interviewer
|
Weber, Marc, Interviewer
|
Publisher
Computer History Museum
Place of Publication
Marietta, GA, USA
Extent
37 p.
Format
PDF
Category
Transcription
Subject
Elloree (South Carolina); Ku Klux Klan (KKK); NAACP; Clemson Career Workshop; Georgia Tech; electrical engineering; Mitre; Calhoun Honors College; Volcy, Jerry; Black Graduate Student Association (BGSA); Universal Black Pages; Macalou, Alou; Advanced Technology Development Center (ATDC); Office Minority Educational Development; White House; Project CHIP (Computer Hardware Investigation and Procedurement); KnowledgeBase
Collection Title
CHM Oral History Collection
Credit
Computer History Museum