Lore Harp & Vector Graphic

Lore Harp & Vector Graphic

Silicon Valley’s Forgotten Female Microcomputer Pioneers

By BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT

Date and time

Thu, 22 May 2025 14:30 - 17:00 GMT+1

Location

BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT

25 Copthall Ave London EC2R 7BP United Kingdom

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours 30 minutes

Summary

Vector Graphic was an early first computer manufacturers developing microcomputers. It was a female founded business.

SPEAKER

Gareth Edwards

AGENDA

14.30pm starts

17.00 pm Ends

SYNOPSIS

Inspired by the release of the Altair 8800, Vector Graphic became one of the first computer manufacturers developing pre-built microcomputers optimised for the small-business market. It was also a female founded and managed business. In 1981, it became only the second female-founded company on the Nasdaq stock exchange, missing out on being the first by a matter of days.

In this talk I’ll cover the history of Vector Graphic and its primary founder Lore Harp. We’ll look at it its foundation as a memory board supplier operating out of the back room of a Californian home to its peak as one of the most respected suppliers of business computers in America.

We’ll look at the challenges Harp and co-founder Carole Ely faced as female founders in a primarily male industry, as well as Harp’s working relationships with Bill Gates, Adam Osborne, PC Creator Don Estridge and other key industry figures. We’ll also explore how Vector shaped Silicon Valley's approach to employee relations and stock options (Vector were the first Silicon Valley firm to include an employee share purchase option in their IPO).

Finally, we'll explore the reason’s for Vector’s eventual collapse in 1987 and ask an important question: why has a computer firm so important to understanding early Silicon Valley business computing been continually overlooked in the historical narrative?

SPEAKER BIOGRAPHY

Gareth Edwards (who also publishes as "John Bull“) is a writer and historian who focuses on exploring the gaps in common historical narratives.

He is currently the author of [LINK: https://every.to/the-crazy-ones] ”The Crazy Ones: The Forgotten Men and Women of Silicon Valley" a regular column for Every.to. In this, he highlights critical figures outside the common narrative of computing's past, and tries to place them in both the context of the time and why they are important today.

Edwards has been captivated by computers since his first encounter with a Commodore 64 as a child.

In addition to his work as a historian, he is a respected Digital Strategist in both the UK and US, where he is recognised as the creator of the £ldquo;Trust Thermocline” theory of system collapse. He is an avid collector of old computers, rare books and interviews, and of abandoned cats.

You can follow him on mastodon.me.uk/@garius and bsky.app/profile/garius.bsky.social.

Our events are for adults aged 16 years and over.

BCS is a membership organisation. If you enjoy this event, please consider joining BCS. You’ll be very welcome. You’ll receive access to many exclusive career development tools, an introduction to a thriving professional community and also help us Make IT Good For Society. Join BCS today:

https://www.bcs.org/membership/events

If you are attending in person, please familiarise yourself with the Visitor Instructions for the BCS London Office.

Please note, if you have any accessibility needs, please let us know via groups@bcs.uk and we’ll work with you to make suitable arrangements.

For overseas delegates who wish to attend the event, please note that BCS does not issue invitation letters.


THIS EVENT IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY:

Computer Conservation Society

Visit: https://www.bcs.org/membership-and-registrations/member-communities/computer-conservation-society/

Organised by

We are all responsible for ensuring technology-led change is safe and positive for everyone in society. At BCS we’re committed to meeting this responsibility under royal charter.

That’s why we set the highest standards of professionalism and best practice in the industry, share knowledge, and develop skills and capability tuned to our evolving digital world.

We’ve been supporting the technology industry since 1957 and our 67,000-strong membership spans 150 countries. Every member actively promotes IT professionalism and we provide them with career development opportunities and bring the community together to address the professional, ethical and economic challenges facing technology today.

Free