This was a man whose contribution isn't easy to fully grasp.
Check out this Hacker News
discussion; it's full of remarks, widely varying but all appreciative. Naturally his TTL Cookbook is much celebrated, but here are just a few other examples:
h2odragon wrote:
I tried to explain to my wife why Mr Lancaster's use of the phrase: "The Postscript general purpose programming language" was a sign that he was even nuttier than me.
JohnFen wrote:
Although I was introduced to him through his electronics books, I think it's no exaggeration to say that of all the books I've read, it was "The Incredible Secret Money Machine" that had the largest influence in my life.
Too many years ago, when I was getting ready to start my new business, I read pretty much every business book I could lay my hands on. Although easily the shortest, "The Incredible Secret Money Machine" was the best of them by a longshot. It distills fairly commonsense business advice into a short collection of concentrated wisdom, and tailors it for the one-person venture. I think part of the value is that is isn't an academic treatise on entrepreneurship. It's more like a short writeup on what worked and didn't work for Don's own business ventures.
I think that in every business mistake I've made, I can point to a page in that book where he said outright not to do whatever I did.
lcuff wrote:
In the Incredible Secret Money Machine, one of his tips was to cut off the power cord to your TV. (Pre Internet era!) The solid advice to not let yourself get distracted is invaluable. And harder than ever in today's world.
Speaking for myself, Don's Cheap Video Cookbook triggered an immensely subversive train of thought. How deliciously naughty an idea it is to trick the CPU into unaccustomed behaviors by intercepting some of the bytes fetched from memory and replacing them with blatant fabrications!
I implemented Cheap Video on three homebrew microcomputer systems, and my 1988
KK Computer brings together Don's "lie to the CPU" trick and
'C02 undefined-opcode behavior to create a rogue super-6502 with 6 new registers and 44 new instructions.
An obituary is posted
here. And Don's web site, the Guru Lair, is
here.
-- Jeff
_________________
In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
https://laughtonelectronics.com/Arcana/ ... mmary.html