Utility software When the
IBM PC made its debut in 1981, Norton was among the first to buy one. After he was laid off during an aerospace industry cutback, he took up microcomputer programming to make ends meet. One day he accidentally deleted a file. Rather than re-enter the data, as most would have, he decided to write a program to recover the information from the disk. His friends were delighted with the program and he developed a group of utility programs that he sold – one at a time – to user groups. In 1982, he founded
Peter Norton Computing with $30,000 and an IBM computer. The company was a pioneer in
IBM PC compatible utilities software. Its 1982 introduction of the
Norton Utilities included Norton's UNERASE tool to
retrieve erased data from
MS-DOS and
IBM PC DOS formatted disks. In 1984, Norton Computing reached $1 million in revenue, and version 3.0 of the Norton Utilities was released. Norton had three clerical people working for him. He was doing all of the software development, all of the book writing, all of the manual writing and running the business. He hired his fourth employee and first programmer, Brad Kingsbury, in July 1985. In late 1985, Norton hired Barbara Schultz as President, handling day-to-day operations. In 1985, Norton Computing produced the Norton Editor, a programmer's
text editor created by Stanley Reifel, and
Norton Guides, a
terminate-and-stay-resident program which showed reference information for
assembly language and other IBM PC internals, but could also display other reference information compiled into the appropriate file format.
Norton Commander, a file managing tool for DOS, was introduced in 1986. Norton Computing revenue rose to $5 million in 1986, $11 million in 1987, and $15 million in 1988. Its products won several utility awards, and it was ranked 136th on the 1988
Inc. magazine list of the 500 fastest-growing private companies in America, with 38 employees. Norton himself was named "Entrepreneur of the Year" by
Arthur Young & Co. (1988 High Technology Award Winner Greater Los Angeles Region) and
Venture magazine. On April 12, 1989, Norton appointed Ron Posner chief executive of Norton Computing. Norton continued as chairman. Posner's goal was to rapidly grow the company into a major software vendor. Soon after his arrival, Posner hired a new president, a new chief financial officer, and added a vice president of sales. In 1988, Norton Computing had released the Norton Backup program dedicated to backing up and restoring hard disks. Norton Utilities for the
Macintosh was launched in 1989. In 1989, Norton Computing had $25 million in sales. In August 1990, Norton sold it to Symantec for $70 million. Posner orchestrated the merger. Norton was given one-third of Symantec's stock, worth about $60 million, and a seat on Symantec's board of directors. The acquired company became a division of Symantec and was renamed Peter Norton Computing Group. About one-third of Norton Computing's 115 employees were laid off after the merger. Norton marketed his early software in person, leaving behind little pamphlets with technical notes at users group meetings and computer stores. A publisher saw his pamphlets, and saw that he could write about a technical subject. The publisher called him and asked him if he wanted to write a book. Norton's first computer book,
Inside the IBM PC: Access to Advanced Features & Programming (Techniques), was published in 1983. Eight editions of this bestseller were published, the last in 1999. Norton wrote several other technical manuals and introductory computing books. He began writing monthly columns in 1983 for
PC Magazine and later
PC Week magazine as well, which he wrote until 1987. He soon became recognized as a principal authority on IBM personal computer technology. In September 1983, Norton started work on ''The Peter Norton Programmer's Guide to the IBM PC''. The book was a popular and comprehensive guide to programming the original IBM PC platform (covering
BIOS and
MS-DOS system calls in great detail). The first (1985) edition was nicknamed "the pink shirt book", after the pink shirt that Norton wore for the cover photo, and Norton's crossed-arm pose on that cover is a U.S. registered trademark. The second (1988) edition, renamed ''The New Peter Norton Programmer's Guide to the IBM PC & PS/2
, again featured the crossed arms, pink shirt cover image. Richard Wilton co-authored the second edition. This was followed by the third (1993) edition of "the Norton book", renamed The Peter Norton PC Programmer's Bible
, co-authored with Wilton and Peter Aitken. Later editions of Peter Norton's Inside the PC'', a broad-brush introduction to personal computer technology, featured Norton in his crossed-arm pose on the cover, wearing a white shirt.
Later career In 2002, Acorn Technologies lured Norton out of a 10-year business hibernation. Norton has a "significant investment" in the company and serves as Chairman of Acorn's board of directors. Norton is chairman of eChinaCash, a company he founded in 2003. Posner is CEO. == Personal life ==