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・ Computer History Museum
・ Computer Hope
・ Computer Incident Advisory Capability
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・ Computer keyboard
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Computer Literacy Bookshops
・ Computer lock
・ Computer Love
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・ Computer Love (Kraftwerk song)
・ Computer Love (Zapp song)
・ Computer Magazine
・ Computer magazine
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・ Computer mapping
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・ Computer Memories Inc.


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Computer Literacy Bookshops : ウィキペディア英語版
Computer Literacy Bookshops
Computer Literacy Bookshops was a local chain of bookstores selling primarily technical-oriented books in Northern California. It was founded in 1983 in Sunnyvale, California, where its concentration in technical books fit well with its Silicon Valley customer base.
Computer Literacy was acquired by CBooks Express in 1997, and after going public traded as fatbrain.com, selling books both online and in brick-and-mortar stores. Fatbrain was acquired by Barnes & Noble in 2000, which absorbed the company into its main enterprise, and shut down the physical stores the following year.
==History==
The first Computer Literacy Bookshop was opened in March 1983〔Susan Meyers, "People in the News: Dan Doernberg & Rachel Unkefer," ''PC Magazine'', July 10, 1984.〕〔Kathy Kincade, "The Making of a Computer Bookstore," ''Computer Language Magazine'', September 1987.〕 on Lawrence Expressway between Lakeside Drive and Titan Way in Sunnyvale, California, by founders Dan Doernberg and Rachel Unkefer. It was located in the heart of Silicon Valley, not far from where the original Fry's Electronics store opened two years later. In 1987 the company opened two additional stores: one on North First Street in San Jose〔Nancy Marx Better, "Their Equation for Success Is, Well, Technical,"''San Jose Mercury News'' October 26, 1987.〕 and another in the TechMart complex near Great America in Santa Clara. The San Jose store was probably the largest computer bookstore in America, with over 14,000 square feet of floorspace dedicated to new computer books. The TechMart store subsequently relocated to the headquarters of Apple Computer, Inc. at One Infinite Loop in Cupertino.
The store not only sold books and periodicals but displayed galley pre-prints for skimming and editing, held author and guest engineer speaking events such as Gene Amdahl or Donald Knuth.
In 1993, the only East Coast location was opened in the Tysons Corner area of suburban Washington, DC to make a total of four bricks-and-mortar locations. On August 25, 1991, the company registered the domain name clbooks.com and began taking book orders from customers worldwide via email. Their UUCP hostname was clb_books.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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