PBCHM / GUIDELINES
GL Contributor guide

Share
a life in pen computing.

A biography submitted here becomes a permanent person page in the museum — with the same Biography, Editorial, and Oral History tabs you see on the rest of the site.

Length
1,500–3,000 words
Format
Plain text
Submit by
Email

Share
a life in pen computing.

Contributor guidelines A biography submitted here becomes a permanent person page in the museum -- with the same Biography, Editorial, and Oral History tabs you see on the rest of the site.

Who to write about

Yourself, a colleague, or a mentor.

Engineers, designers, product managers, journalists, founders, marketers -- anyone whose work touched pen-based computing. Subjects can be living or deceased; for deceased subjects we welcome submissions from family, colleagues, or biographers.

Scope

The pen-computing era (~1985-2005).

Emphasize the subject's pen / tablet / handwriting-recognition work. A broader career is fine to mention, but the pen-computing chapter is what the museum is here to preserve -- give it the most words and the most sources.

What makes
a good biography.

Six conventions Follow these and the draft will need very little editing before it goes live.

01

Length

1,500-3,000 words. The exact length depends on the subject's historical role in pen computing -- a founder gets more room than a marketing lead, who in turn gets more room than a beta tester.

02

Structure

Break the biography into 8-15 short sections, each with a heading like "Early Life," "Career," or "Legacy." The template below shows the typical set. The headings auto-generate a table of contents on the published page, so use them generously.

03

Tone

Third person, factual, encyclopedic. Avoid marketing language ("visionary," "revolutionary," "industry-leading") and first-person voice. Let the achievements speak for themselves; readers can decide whether they were revolutionary.

04

Footnotes

Cite every non-obvious factual claim with a numbered reference like [1] or [2] inline, and list the sources at the end. We convert these to proper HTML footnotes during editing -- you don't need to write any markup.

05

Sources

Prefer primary sources: contemporaneous magazine articles, press releases, patents, conference proceedings, recorded interviews. Wikipedia is a useful starting point but not a citation -- chase its references instead.

06

Photos

Send one portrait photo plus any historical photos (at the demo booth, on stage, with the prototype) as separate attachments -- don't embed them in the draft. Include a one-line caption per photo and note who took it if you know.

Get the
template.

Plain text, fill in the blanks Copy it into the editor of your choice -- Word, Google Docs, Notes, email -- and replace the bracketed prompts with your own prose.
BIOGRAPHY OF [FULL NAME]
========================

ONE-LINE SUMMARY
[Born]-[Died]. [Role they're best known for in pen computing], at [Organization].
Example: 1958-2019. Founding engineer of GO Corporation's PenPoint OS.


EARLY LIFE
[2-3 paragraphs: where/when born, family context relevant to later career,
schooling through high school. Cite anything non-obvious with [1], [2], etc.]


EDUCATION
[Universities attended, degrees, advisors or thesis topics if relevant.]


EARLY CAREER
[First job(s) before the pen-computing work. Keep brief unless directly
relevant -- this section exists to set up the pen-computing chapter.]


PEN COMPUTING WORK
[The main section. Multiple paragraphs. Cover: which company/companies,
which products, role/title, technical contributions, key dates. This is
the part the museum cares about most -- be specific and cite sources.]


KEY CONTRIBUTIONS
[Bulleted or paragraph form. Patents, papers, products shipped, specific
technical innovations. Each non-obvious claim should have a footnote.]


ORGANIZATIONS
[List of companies / labs / standards bodies the person was part of during
the pen-computing era, with dates.]


LATER CAREER
[What they did after pen computing wound down -- only if notable.]


LEGACY
[How their pen-computing work influenced subsequent products, people,
or ideas. This is the "why does this person matter to the museum"
paragraph.]


SOURCES
[1] Author, "Article Title," Publication, Date, page or URL.
[2] ...
[3] ...

(Use plain numbered references like [1] [2] in the prose -- we will
convert them to proper HTML footnotes during editing.)

---
SEND THIS DRAFT TO: [email protected]
Subject line: Biography submission - [your name or the subject's name]

Send
your draft.

Email goes straight to the curator No form, no account, no plugin. Plain text, Word, Google Docs, or pasted into the email body -- all fine. No HTML required.

Attach photos separately. If the subject is deceased and you have permission from the family or estate to publish, note that in your email so we can credit appropriately. Expect a reply within a few days; once accepted, the biography typically goes live within a week or two after light copy-editing.

Email [email protected]