Caroline Rose was a technical writer at Apple from 1982, lead writer and editor of "Inside Macintosh". Apple-era starts at 1h22m in the video, NeXT-era at 1h58m.
Be sure to check out her stories on Folkore.org:
https://www.folklore.org/0-index.html?author=Caroline+Rose
and esp.:
> Pretty soon, I figured out that if Caroline had trouble understanding something, it probably meant that the design was flawed. On a number of occasions, I told her to come back tomorrow after she asked a penetrating question, and revised the API to fix the flaw that she had pointed out. I began to imagine her questions when I was coding something new, which made me work harder to get things clearer before I went over them with her.
This alone is enough to justify hiring great technical writers (and technical writers with programming experience.)
Ah, remembering the phone-book Inside Mac volumes! Those were the days.
(Kids these days with StackExchange and Copilot have no idea.... now get off my lawn!)
I own one of her drafts, as I was a 3rd party beta tester for the Mac a good 9 months before release. My copy is mimeographed and filled with pencil and pen corrections and notes that were scribbled on the mimeographs as I worked with the Apple OS developers. It's all in a binder I keep in an airtight zip locked bag. I've been meaning to get it scanned and put online for decades now.
My introduction to Pascal and Assembly Language were after finding one of those huge paperbacks on the shelves of a Salvation Army in North Huntington, Pennsylvania. This was long after the book had lost all relevance. But before that I was stuck thinking about programming in terms of Java and C++ OOP. Small things that changed the course of my programming career.
Remarkable interview.
It's amazing that she wrote the Mac documentation without actually having access to a working development system.
I also like the idea that writers should be embedded in the software group.
The "joy and excitement" and camaraderie of the Mac group is interesting as well, as a key to its success.
Interesting that the Mac group worked in one room.
Surprising that (pre-ADA) she could legally be fired from NeXT for having an RSI disability.
And that Jobs fired her again (as part of shutting down Apple's technical journal, presumably to cut costs) after he returned to Apple.
Interestingly, her first task at NeXT was writing the user manual for WriteNow for Macintosh (apparently in WriteNow, and certainly on a Macintosh).
For folks who aren't familiar w/ it, it was contracted for by Apple as a hedge against MacWrite not making it and as an "advanced MacWrite" --- ~100,000 lines of assembly language, it was blazingly fast, yet still had quite nice features and was _very_ capable (my wife wrote her Master's Thesis in it) which I then had to coax out of HP LaserJet (IV I think --- the first 600 dpi one).
Ah, yes. Back in the '90s I'd visit Wordsworths in Harvard Square every few weeks to pick up the latest volume of Apple developer documentation. Great bookstore, great books. (Didn't use most of them, but it definitely made me feel hip in an Apple-centric way.)
The Computer History Museum's long form interviews are a wonderful resource.
I wish Apple still wrote good documentation.
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