Margot Comstock (formerly Margot Comstock Tommervik, (1940-10-11)October 11, 1940 – October 7, 2022(2022-10-07) (aged 81)[1]) was co-founder and editor of Softalk magazine, which was influential in the Apple II community, as part of a growing personal computing movement.
Career
Comstock worked as a freelance textbook editor, magazine article writer, and journalist.[2] She also enjoyed playing games,[3] and in 1979 she won more than $15,000 on the television game showPassword.[4] She and her husband Allan Tommervik purchased an Apple II+ with some of the money.[5] She was enthusiastic about trying games and other software for the computer, along with its larger potential for helping people try new things.[3] They decided to start a magazine for other Apple users, using the rest of the prize money and a second mortgage on their home.[4]
Softalk
Comstock and Tommervik founded Softalk in 1980.[2] They got in contact with a company called Softape that distributed Apple II software and had a newsletter, and they arranged to take over the newsletter and develop it into an Apple II enthusiast magazine.[6] Comstock was 39 at the time.[7] She set the vision for the magazine as taking a journalistic approach, instead of focusing on programming as other contemporary computer magazines did.[2] This made the magazine accessible to Apple II users who weren't programmers.[7] Comstock's work was part of a transition in personal computing around this time, from computers being hobbyist projects to computers getting used by people interested in games and practical applications.[7]
Comstock and Tommervik published the last issue of Softalk in 1984, because fewer companies were paying for advertising, due to a larger shift in the industry, and they did not have money to print more issues.[7]
After Softalk
In 1987, a Smithsonian video history project interviewed Comstock alongside people who had published popular software for the Apple II.[2]
Comstock and Tommervik later published Softline, a game magazine with funding from Ken Williams.[3] They also published several books, including a Mac book by Doug Clapp.[8]
Comstock was an associate designer for Rama, an adventure game published in 1996.[9]
Comstock gave a keynote presentation at KansasFest in 2014.[10]
Doug Carlston, Software People: An Insider's Look at the Personal Computer Software Industry (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1985), 168–74
Steven Levy, Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution (1994; New York: Penguin, 2001), 308–10, 388–89
"Smithsonian Video-history Program, Minicomputers and Microcomputers, Session One, the Brotherhood", by Jon B. Eklund, Smithsonian Institution Archives, July 31, 1987, Record Unit 9533