He was a founding member of the Homebrew Computer Club and known for coauthoring The Art of Compiler Design (1992).
[1] Pittman received a BA in Math from the University of California, Berkeley in 1966 and a PhD in Computer and Information Science at University of California, Santa Cruz in 1985.
[2] Pittman was a founding member of the Homebrew Computer Club, who created a personal computer based on the low-powered Intel 4004 chip and maintained the Homebrew mailing list.
In two months, he wrote a Tiny BASIC interpreter for the Motorola 6800, selling it for only five dollars.
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