The July 1986 issue of a color computing magazine called Rainbow offers some dynamite photographs of life in a publishing company’s office space. The fashions, the computers, the decor – it’s an 80s wonder to behold.
The magazine Rainbow grew rapidly over the next few years, and branched into PCM magazine “The Personal Computing Magazine for Tandy Users”, and VCR “The Home Video Monthly magazine”.
It doesn’t really matter what office space this is; it’s enough just to gaze upon it. But for those interested, according to Retrospace, this is the Falsoft publishing building. The business started small in 1981 as a local Kentucky color computing rag printed on a dot matrix printer.
(h/t: Retrospace)
The magazine Rainbow grew rapidly over the next few years, and branched into PCM magazine “The Personal Computing Magazine for Tandy Users”, and VCR “The Home Video Monthly magazine”.
It doesn’t really matter what office space this is; it’s enough just to gaze upon it. But for those interested, according to Retrospace, this is the Falsoft publishing building. The business started small in 1981 as a local Kentucky color computing rag printed on a dot matrix printer.
(h/t: Retrospace)