http://www.retrotechnology.com/herbs_stuff/godbout_obit.html I have reworked my posted remarks about Bill Godbout, into a larger tribute document, with images of Godbout flyers and documents. Today, I received from Jack Rubin a collection of Godbout-branded flyers. The ones I display on that page today, were sent by Godbout Electronics in 1975, to customers of their electronic components, digital kits. A later flyer I have, shows Godbout's earliest "Altair" RAM card. The graphics are iconic 1970's commercial art by mail-order surplus electronics companies. I also show a 1984 Compupro brochure for the their multiuser 8086/Z80 business system. It's a first-class commercial computer-product brochure; just ten years after selling single-chip digital clocks from magazine ads. I continue to reference George Morrow and Bill Godbout together in my document. While they ran separate businesses, Godbout initially supplied parts to Morrow and other S-100 developers in the Oakland CA area. And Morrow and Godbout led or encouraged the IEEE-696 standard that was largely based on their product-bus. Their times and works are a peek into how "S-100 microcomputing" developed in the first decade after the MITS Altair 8800. These are the reasons I "cover" both of them in this tribute to Bill Godbout. Herb -- Herbert R. Johnson, New Jersey in the USA http://www.retrotechnology.com OR .net