Serial port performance did not scale well on early pcs, so an industry was grown with smart serial cards. There were a few serial cards, but most  didn't have the smarts, just shared interrupts. Best performing, in my usage, was the Stallion brand, an Australian company. These cards had their own processor, uarts and ram. Had used 4-32 ports. I am guessing they did high speed transfers via the high speed bus on the PC, relieving the main CPU from getting interrupts, doing queuing, caching etc. These cards were supported by SCO products like Xenix and Unix, some others and ran on a PC.

Flying aircraft could be efficient for some visits that didn't have direct city pairs served by airlines, especially the US. Plus a lot of fun, if you do it yourself.

I used to push statistical and financial data around Australia in the 80s via dial up using automated scripting with Zmodem, Sun hosts, PC remotes. Was very reliable. 

IBM NDAs and legals can feel overwhelming in meetings....

Serge

On Wed, 7 Apr 2021 at 11:59, Larry McVoy <lm@mcvoy.com> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 06, 2021 at 06:49:31PM -0700, Jon Steinhart wrote:
> Greg 'groggy' Lehey writes:
> >
> > Another hypothesis I had ties in with this: both he and Bill Gates
> > were speakers at Euromicro 1980 in London, from 16 to 18 September.
> > Bill Gates was a no-show.  Would that fit in with Gary's "gone
> > flying"?
> >
> > Greg
>
> According to Tom, no, he was visiting a somewhat local customer, I
> think in the bay area, which is why he was flying his plane.  This
> wasn't the modern times when CEOs owned fancy jets.

Yeah, I went and looked, it was a small $5M/year (not that small)
business and for some reason he was delivering software with his
small plane.