Thomas Eugene Foulks

Thom Foulks

Thomas "Thom" Eugene Foulks (August 27, 1935 – March 24, 2004) worked as a disk jockey, editor of military base newspapers, manager/news director of AFRTS (Air Force Radio Television) stations in Iceland and the Philippines, daily newspaper front-page editor, television videographer and news anchorman (local CBS - KKTV and NBC - KOAA affiliates), TV public affairs director, and a politician (Administrative Assistant, Board of County Commissioners for El Paso County in Colorado). In the latter capacity, he learned that mainframe programmers who worked for the county could actually make a program do what the user wanted, not just what they thought it should do. About the same time, he decided he could run the county better than his boss, and wound up as Commissioner Chairman (1975–79).

Thom's life is honored by having his name on a couple of public buildings, including the Pikes Peak Center (http://www.pikespeakcenter.org/) public auditorium. Politics didn't interest Thom as a lifelong career—too many people recognized him in the supermarket checkout line. So he did not seek reelection, and began freelancing as a computer specialist.

Then came an Apple II, a clutch of TRS-80s, modems, operating a Bulletin Board System (BBS, a forebearer of the Internet), and some computer userdom notoriety as author of the original operator's manual for TBBS. He taught himself dBase and Turbo Pascal, and worked for five years as a commercial freelance programmer, specializing in databases. In the meantime, his wife, Vi, (an experienced Certified Medical Transcriptionist) was putting together a commercial word processing firm that successfully transitioned from IBM Selectrics to computers. He became chief tech support for a multi-employee job-typing empire that they finally decided was too large (as SOHO began coming on), and so decided to dissolve while they were ahead.

About that time, a broadcast industry contact called and asked Thom, "Why don't you do a talk show on using computers?" That turned into a three-year gig for Business Radio Network's "Computing Success!"—1991 Best Radio Show award from the Computer Press Association. (John Dvorak came in second.) From that, evolved a PC World "Business Fixtures" column that was actually kind of disastrous: he couldn't handle the three-month-lag leadtime, so they mutually parted company. His first national story (in Basic Computing, on computerized voting) was published in 1983, and he had hundreds of reviews and articles published.

All that national exposure, however, did let him get together with some neat people. Like Jerry Pournelle and Thom once hammed it up at a Denver online-users computer seminar. Michael Miller (now editor of PC Magazine, then of InfoWorld) and Thom teamed up on a lot of radio activity as well as broadcast coverage from a Vegas Comdex, interviewing people like Michael Dell and Andy Grove. Bill Gates and Thom once shared a coffee table, as he talked intensely about Chicago. Steve Jobs gave Thom an eyeball-to-eyeball personal sales pitch about the NeXT, in a back corner of a Los Angeles amphitheater. One of the many users on Thom's BBS (Bread Board) was Van Wolverton who used to call from his Montana ranch to Colorado Springs just to yak with other BBSers. The designer of the famed Cheetah i486, Ron Sartore, allowed Thom to scavenge his stockpile of Cheetah parts as the firm was closing down. He had a mini factory in his basement building mother boards and generic PCs.

Prior to his 1998 retirement, he was a Product Reviewer for the Software Library Evaluations Division (SLED) of ZD Net, one of a national team responsible for the independent review of all software products posted on the various ZD Net services. He also taught hands-on HTML courses for ZDNet University, a leading-edge effort that was a mini-career of its own.

Timeline of significant dates:

Date Description
1954–1966 Instructor and Journalist, U.S. Air Force. Assignments included Station Manager, AFRS, Keflavik AB-Iceland; News Director and principal anchorman, AFRTS, Clark AB, Philippine Islands. During this period, also “moonlighted” extensively as a civilian broadcaster, including jobs at Denver’s KVOR, KBTR and KWGN and Gulfport, Mississippi’s WGCM
1966 Discharged from the Air Force. Became front page editor, Colorado Springs Free Press.
1966–1967 Host, "The NightFoulks Show," KVOR, Colorado Springs, CO
1967–1973 Assistant News Director and utility anchorman, KKTV, Colorado Springs.
1973–1974 Chief Administrative Assistant, El Paso County, Colorado.
1975–1979 Chairman, Board of County Commissioners, El Paso County.
1979–1986 Public Affairs Director and Editorial Writer, KOAA-TV, Pueblo-Colorado Springs. Won several Colorado Broadcaster's Association "Starwards" for local events programming and editorial-commentary. The 1980 "Battle on the Home Front" regarding Ft. Carson's expansion in Southeast Colorado along the Arkansas River, was judged that year's Best Documentary of all Colorado television stations.
1989–1992 Host, "Computing Success!" live phone call-in show, Business Radio Network, Colorado Springs. In 1991, recipient of the "Best Radio Show" from the Computer Press Association.
1993 Columnist, PC World magazine, on business computing topics.
1993–1996 HTML online instructor, ZDNet (Ziff-Davis) University. Led the transition of ZDU from a CompuServe service to a Web service.
1997–1999 Product reviewer and columnist for ZDNet’s online library.
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