Fido was originally the name of a computer I had in the late¨ 70's. I was working for a friend's consulting company (Microft Inc,¨ Falmouth MA) and we were using my computer, which was in a four foot¨ high rack: 18 slot chassis with 14 cards (4MHz Z80, CPU 64K memory,¨ bootstrap ROM card (six cards so far\dots), 8" floppy ,DC-300 tape¨ drive, and a BASF 6172 8-inch Winchester tape drive which was as fast¨ as it was unreliable. (It had a progressive and degenerative disease¨ we called "the whoops"; the voice-coil head positioner make the¨ customary chirping sounds; the BASF's favorite failure mode was to¨ lose track of where it's head was at (quite literally) and instead of¨ the familiar chirping sounds as it seeked up and down the disk, it¨ made a sort of whooping sound, like a falling siren, followed by a¨ KLUNK as the positioner hit it's backstop. You had to power it down to¨ reset it. Most annoying.) The rear door was a rack of fans to keep it¨ all cool. It was extremely large and complex, and when it ran (most of¨ the time) quite powerful. It ran PDOS (a rather nice CP/M-80¨ compatible OS) and we did "C" (BDS and Whitesmiths) and assembly work¨ on it. It had so many parts\dots{} I called it a mongrel. I had taken to¨ calling it "Fido". Debbie took a business card, whited-out the name¨ and wrote in "Fido, Office Computer". The name stuck.