Byte magazine artist Robert Tinney, who illustrated the birth of PCs, dies at 78

mikecee

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I kept more Bytes than I rationally should have partly because it was hard to discard such beautiful covers.
I regret that I had to discard all of mine at the last minute during a house move, when they literally would not fit on the van. If I could just tip off my younger self to cut off the front covers, I'd have some great display pieces now!
 
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JustinS

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Byte stopped commissioning Tinney’s cover art around 1987, opting for product photographs as competition in the computer magazine market intensified.

It was probably a smart business move but the magazine was visibly diminished after they made this change. If you have the opportunity to flip through some old issues, it is a night and day difference.
 
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NetMage

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written partially in a Threaded Interpreted language (FORTH). I'm old.
The Forth/TIL issue was background for me when I used the HP-71B Forth/Assembler manual (I had the module because of my interest in Forth) to write the first unthreader (?) for the HP-48SX ROM, leading eventually (I think) to HP releasing their internal development tools.
 
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sixdogjim

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I was the technical editor at Wayne Green Books and Kilobaud magazine in the 80s. We scored Robert to do a book cover for us and were so very proud of it. The book itself went on to be a less-than-bestseller. :)

He humanized technology and I'm pleased to see his talent celebrated here.

IMG_4049.jpg
 
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Ditto, still have a big 'ol pile. "They" came through my college about 1985 and an offered a serious discount for students. They accumulated from there.

But it's tough to read them anymore, given how much work they show we had to do to get things working. Whole articles about which parallel printer port works best.

Keyboard articles seem perennially relevant, though.
I was horribly offended when the manufacturers decided to replace the Centronics interface with a 25 pin RS-232C type one. How times change.

And Byte was a wonderful magazine, memorable covers, excellent articles (remember 'Circuit Cellar'?) and the hours of perusing those hundreds of pages of ads...
 
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Alethe

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A sad passing. His illustrations are what first enticed me to crack the magazine open. Imaginative if not wondrous images. I remember a few quite well, notably the Piracy cover...

I learned far more about how computers, compilers, languages and sundries work in the pages of Byte than from any other source. For a teen in a small Quebec town sneaking into the computer lab of his college (about 10 TRS-80s Model I) to understand what makes these newfangled things tick, it was a godsend.
 
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brionl

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I think you mean "next month's phone book". ;)

And even then only if you buy it just before it leaves the newsstands!

The post-dating of computer magazines so that August's comes out in mid-June was always a source of amusement to me. Yes, I get it, you're covering the future. But it confused the heck out of my friends that I was waiting for a big story in September's magazine, which I'd buy in July, and would cover something that you could actually buy in November at the earliest.

Dates are notoriously hard for developers to handle. And apparently also for computer magazine publishers...

Post-dating magazines is standard practice for the entire publishing industry, not just computers.
 
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twelvebore

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RIP

So many happy memories of reading Byte as a youngster. I'd have to take a bus trip in to my local large town to find the only newsagent that carried it on the shelves, then be gutted to find out that the next edition wasn't out until the following week

But I learned so much! (including how calendars work)
 
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jsully2549

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I was horribly offended when the manufacturers decided to replace the Centronics interface with a 25 pin RS-232C type one. How times change.

And Byte was a wonderful magazine, memorable covers, excellent articles (remember 'Circuit Cellar'?) and the hours of perusing those hundreds of pages of ads...
And thus we seque into Computer Shopper.

My copy was sent to my workplace and I was about the last person to actually see it.

My how times have changed.
 
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It is hard for me to describe the impact Robert Tinney had, but for me his art was a differentiator for Byte magazine. Back when the industry (and hobby) of computers still had much humanity. I still get a kick out of the covers when pulling out one of my back issues of Byte, which still hold a visible place on my bookshelves in my office.
 
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Post-dating magazines is standard practice for the entire publishing industry, not just computers.
I think it is a legacy of postal systems. Magazines were posted around the world to subscribers which could take 2 to 3 weeks and I suspect many complaints would be received if June arrived in July. So they called it July, printed and posted in June and those that got them locally via rapid shippers to newsagents were "lucky"
 
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Huxley Dunsany

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I drove 200 miles to buy my first issue of Byte. The one with Tinney's painting of Newton under the apple tree. All the way home I kept glancing over at it, Tinney riding along with me on the passenger's seat. RIP Robert Tinney. Thank you for the memories.
I have a copy of that one too! I've decided that he based Newton's look on a young Steve Jobs, and nothing will convince me otherwise. Between the obvious connection of Newton/Jobs sitting under an Apple tree and the pun of symbols on the fruit referencing the APL language, I think it's right in Tinney's funny/punny wheelhouse...
Screenshot 2026-02-13 at 7.32.55 AM.png
 
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rayoleary

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i'm too young and too far from the US to feel any nostalgia over byte magazine, but i'm very mesmerized by the covers, which i'm now obsessively perusing. what an incredible work. thanks ars for introducing me to a really cool artist. rip, mr. tinney!
I grew up in Ireland and got my first "PC" (a ZX81) around 83. BYTE was super-expensive as it was imported from the US, and as a 15-year old I didn't have much disposable income, but I was consumed in no time. Compared to the games focus of most UK publications, it felt serious and academic. LOVED that magazine.
 
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rayoleary

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I grew up in Ireland and got my first "PC" (a ZX81) around 83. BYTE was super-expensive as it was imported from the US, and as a 15-year old I didn't have much disposable income, but I was consumed in no time. Compared to the games focus of most UK publications, it felt serious and academic. LOVED that magazine.
Also the equipment prices for "real" systems available in the US at the time were staggering to me; $15K? That was a decent junior annual salary in Ireland back then
 
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Jausten

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I remember the covers well. Thanks for sharing. BYTE probably should have stuck with his illustrations instead of pivoting to product pictures, since the latter is quite common and generic.
Most of the editors at the time felt the same. In trying to make the magazine more appealing to advertisers, BYTE lost some of what made it special.
 
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alansh42

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I think it is a legacy of postal systems. Magazines were posted around the world to subscribers which could take 2 to 3 weeks and I suspect many complaints would be received if June arrived in July. So they called it July, printed and posted in June and those that got them locally via rapid shippers to newsagents were "lucky"
It's from newsstands. The cover date was the date they could be removed from sale and returned if not sold.

This prevented newsstands from immediately returning copies to cover up cash flow issues.
 
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ClintonKeith

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Great magazine in the late seventies. I tried to build everything Steve Ciarcia wrote up. He was visiting the shop I worked for in my teens in CT. I ran into him in the restroom. I was in awe to meet him. He was just “finishing up” and I held out my hand before he washed. He hesitated and shook my hand. One of those dumb kid moments. 😂
 
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Great magazine in the late seventies. I tried to build everything Steve Ciarcia wrote up. He was visiting the shop I worked for in my teens in CT. I ran into him in the restroom. I was in awe to meet him. He was just “finishing up” and I held out my hand before he washed. He hesitated and shook my hand. One of those dumb kid moments. 😂

Thanks for mentioning Steve Ciarcia. I loved his BYTE columns, which were the real nitty gritty of "small systems journalism", and even built some projects, some of which worked despite my handiwork :).

I searched to see where he is now (recently sold his HW mag/biz to an employee), and stumbled across Ciarcia's "Are you wondering how it all began?" origin story he originally published in 2013. It was very interesting to learn that his Circuit Cellar magazine was really BYTE v2.0, launched with BYTE's publisher, circulation manager, financial controller, lead columnist, support team, and national advertising representatives... and Robert Tinney making the cover art. McGraw-Hill had bowdlerized BYTE into a foregettable office PC magazine, but Ciarcia kept it all going, including bringing Tinney's vision of "small systems" into the 1990s. Ciarcia always seemed like the ghost in the BYTE machine (along with Jerry Pournelle, whose "Chaos Manor" column ran even to August 1998 after the magazine was kaput). I wish this Ars article memorializing Tinney had included his art's second act on the covers of Ciarcia's second stage of BYTE. Thanks for inspiring me to discover its history.
 
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