Stunning, Classic Computer Console, from 1958? 183
Predicta Lover writes "It's widely believed that the late-50s Predicta series was the swansong for Philco. After its introduction, RCA's president David Sarnoff is quoted as having said "Philco has reinvented the industry and made TV more exciting again." Somehow, I can't imagine Bill reacting that way to an Apple product launch, at least not publicly. Years later, Philco's phenomenally-designed but questionably-engineered and over-priced TV sets are an icon of modern television design, and are even made in a stunning reproduction form. Maybe Philco would still be in business if they'd thought to shoehorn a contemporary computer into the box and put a high-resolution LCD up top (ahh, I guess that would've been tough...oh, the cruelties of history). At any rate, the researchers and designers at Onomy Labs did just that, 45 years later, and the result is an absolutely lust-worthy piece of computing hardware. Built to eventually house an experimental computer being produced by Sun Labs, the supercharged piece made its debut at their recent Open House held at the Computer History Museum.The Pedestal model that's used here was originally penned by Philco's Catherine Winkler, and is variously described as being inspired by the ideal female form and looking like a gas pump (I am not even going to touch that one). The perpetrators of this project have been mildly vilified by classic TV collectors (fearing imitators) and highly praised by most everyone else...some are calling it the 'best casemod ever'. I don't know about that, but it's definitely a beautiful object."
Best casemod ever? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Best casemod ever? (Score:2, Informative)
admittedly, it doesnt look like much in these pictures, but in real life the thing would look totally wicked as your digital entertainment hub.
Re:Best casemod ever? (Score:1)
Re:Best casemod ever? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Best casemod ever? (Score:2, Insightful)
Man, even sans serif type isn't that old, and there you're talking about a completely new way of writi
Re:Best casemod ever? (Score:2)
That being said, you could get a beer barrel to also not look like it's a beer barrel with a computer hacked into it, and I'd be as unimpressed with the case mod. This one's just a bit boring all up.
back in my day (Score:4, Funny)
Re:back in my day (Score:1)
Re:back in my day (Score:3, Funny)
Re:back in my day (Score:2)
It's got /. on the display! (Score:4, Funny)
http://www.onomy.com/blue/images/headshotf.jpg [onomy.com]
Re:It's got /. on the display! (Score:1)
(Good luck!)
Re:It's got /. on the display! (Score:1)
Re:It's got /. on the display! (Score:2)
Gee, I wonder if somebody'll make a joke about how it stopped working a minute later and it'll be modded up as windows innuendo.
RTFA??? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:RTFA??? (Score:2)
15 seconds of fame... (Score:2)
Note to submitters: if you're going to write out a long submission, throw in some good porn at the end. We deserve *something* for suffering through your inability to WRAP IT UP!
too much text (Score:4, Funny)
Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Huh? (Score:2, Informative)
Nothing special. Technically, RCA went completely out of business (in CE) in 1986. RCA brand is simply a stamp of Thomson Consumer Electronics (which likes to use the name GE Consumer Electronics mark depending on the current customer sentiment and the whim of GE corporate).
Same goes for Magnavox which ha
And don't forget Atari, SCO, Napster... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And don't forget Atari, SCO, Napster... (Score:3, Funny)
Well, you're not allowed to cut off your enemy's head and carry it like a trophy anymore...
And indeed Ferguson. (Score:2)
undead (Score:3, Informative)
Reminds me of ... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not so sure I would want one, or a Philco update, but somewhere between CRT monoliths, plastic flat-screens striving to distinguish themselves, Apple's attempts at novelty and the uber-kewl designs we regularly see in Sci-Fi movies, I'm sure eventually we'll be face to face with something far more interesting.
Brazil "Case Mod" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Brazil "Case Mod" (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.ahleman.com/ElectriClerk.html [ahleman.com]
It's a sacrelige (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
say that this computer, if constantly updated with
newest PC internals and maintained in working
order will continue to work and wnot be obsolete
for many years to come.
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:3, Insightful)
And I may be the only one, but while I can see the appeal of it as an example of 50s design, I personally find it ugly and would not allow it in my home.
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:3, Funny)
I think its ugly. I don't put ugly things in my house. Do you? I mean, beyond your boyfriend?
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
Does your face hurt?
That's funny, it's killing me!
Your puerile sense of humor brings me back to my elementary school years. Thank you very much.
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
I honestly feel that the utility of a built-in HD tuner is marginal anyway, given that most HD content is likely to be delivered over cable or satellite, not OTA, and as such the service prov
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
> I wouldn't say "years to come".
Analog broadcasts ain't goin' nowhere. The majority of people do not own an HDTV set, and they won't when the supposed cutover date gets here. And they won't be pleased at the notion that Congress has mandated that they get a $150 digital tuner set-top box if they want to continue watching TV. I don't own an HDTV set myself, and I have no plans to get one. The cutover wil
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
And [people] won't be pleased at the notion that [the RIAA & MPAA sponsored] Congress has mandated that they get a $150 DRM compliant digital tuner set-top box if they want to continue watching TV. That I think is more realistic
Re:It's a sacrelige (Score:2)
Not for many years... (Score:2)
Sad really, but we gotta have DRM in every home ya know...
No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's an idea: modern Predicta reproductions are available, so why not buy a repro and case-mod it instead of trashing a really neat, really valuable technological artifact from another age?
This is no better than gutting a classic Zenith console radio to make a fishtank. It's lame as hell.
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:4, Insightful)
What's so damn sacred about the design anyway? Sure, it's a nice-looking TV, but it's obsolete which makes it a prime candidate for re-use as something a little more modern.
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:5, Insightful)
No, actually, it's not "hilarious" once you realize that the more hardcore collectors aren't in it to make money, but to see rare and important examples of old-school tech preserved for posterity. Believe me, old TV sets aren't much better as investments than they are as PC cases.
There is a certain aesthetic quailty to an old chassis full of hot, glowing vacuum tubes, capacitors that smell like beeswax, resistors that actually look big enough to block an electron or two, and wiring that might kill you with a touch. Some folks are into that. If you have to ask, you're probably not one of them. Which is fine.
So, why not leave the genuine article to those who will appreciate it? Buy a reproduction Predicta, duct-tape your IDE disk-access light to the side, and pretend it's the real thing. If you're right, it doesn't really matter, does it?
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:1, Insightful)
Of course, you are free to object, but you look pretty silly when you do it.
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:2)
I disagree. What if I was an art collector who decided that my vast collection of classic art, some of which are considered historical milestones, would all look more modern with a few splashes of neon paint and some blinking LEDs embeded in the subject's eyes? It would be defacement of those pieces and I could certainly understa
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:2)
Some guy might also object if you deface your cheerios box, or scuff up that velvet clown painting you picked up at the flea market. You'd probably say he's nuts, and we'd probably all agree with you -- but between him and people crying out in horror when you
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:2)
Um, you should read the post to which you're replying more carefully -- you just said exactly the same things I did, in a tone that suggests you're disagreeing with me!
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:2)
Should we preserve every building ever built? Every picture ever painted? Who decideds what things are "signifigant" enough to preserve. Who's to say what side of the line these obsolete and, if you ask me, ugly old televisions fall on? What makes something more worthy of preservation than something else?
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:2)
Re:No, actually, they're being vilified because... (Score:3, Insightful)
MBA Action 2004 (Score:2)
Re:MBA Action 2004 (Score:2)
Re:MBA Action 2004 (Score:2)
Um, what part of
don't you understand?
Re:MBA Action 2004 (Score:2)
Re:MBA Action 2004 (Score:2)
Re:MBA Action 2004 (Score:2)
Back at you grandad (Score:3, Interesting)
Computer today from the world of the yesterday.
Neat idea.
As a kid, I had one of these TV sets.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Hrm.. (Score:2)
Speaking of ads (Score:3, Interesting)
Vintage Ads [worth1000.com]
Contest Directions
In this contest your challenge is to take modern products and display them in a vintage light, through advertisements. You can also reverse the challenge and take vintage products and display them in a modern way.
It should have been a Mac (Score:1)
Ewww (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ewww (Score:2)
Re:Ewww (Score:2)
Re:Ewww (Score:2)
War... war never changes. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:War... war never changes. (Score:2)
nick
Not the point, but that controller? (Score:1)
What the hell? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What the hell? (Score:2)
Re:What the hell? (Score:2)
Re:What the hell? (Score:2)
"Hardware Hacking" icon? (Score:2, Funny)
How about an icon involving a pci card and glue?
Re:"Hardware Hacking" icon? (Score:2)
What kind of n00b uses glue?
Duct tape, baby!
It's part of a series (Score:2)
Re:It's part of a series (Score:2)
Re:It's part of a series (Score:2)
It also had those nice old light switches that go CLUNK when you turn them on or off.
Re:It's part of a series (Score:2)
and for the dark side of Sarnoff.... (Score:4, Interesting)
And now, for the dark side of Mr. Sarnoff, who did NOT invent the TV set:
http://www.time.com/time/time100/scientist/profi le/farnsworth03.html
Sarnoff and RCA are the scum of the earth; they ruined a guy's life simply to not have to pay him royalties; thankfully, history has for the most part set the record straight for anyone who digs a little.
Pretty sad; Farnsworth never saw a dime and went into deep depression over the whole thing. Farnsworth saw the waste of his invention almost from the get-go; as the Time article says, his son said "I suppose you could say that he felt he had created kind of a monster, a way for people to waste a lot of their lives."
Nothing's changed in 50 years- corporations still bully the "little guy" like this. Back in the 80's, a company my father started had technology stolen from them by NCR (National Cash Register Corporation). Despite a signed NDA, NCR ripped off technology they were demo'd. There was clear evidence NCR had stolen the design, they had the NDA in hand, etc- but NCR managed to drag it out in court for years. I believe the suit was abandoned due to lack of funds, but I don't recall- it was a subject that was not discussed often or pleasantly in our house.
I hope they rot in hell- they helped cripple the company, which was working on some really innovative touch screen technology. Much of the touchscreen technology, now in use by PDAs and whatnot, you can owe to DTI- Digital Techniques Inc- a tiny little Burlington, MA company nobody ever heard of. Probably their most "famous" product was the very early touchscreen system in Super Stop and Shop where you could enter a product name and get a map to where it was in the store; they also did some award winning videodisk based exhibits for the Museum Of Science. They were also bullied out of an air traffic control system project with the FAA...by Raytheon. DTI designed a system that, in the late 80's, would have allowed a controller to manage all his electronics(radios and whatnot) from one small touchscreen system. Decades ahead of its time.
Re:and for the dark side of Sarnoff.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sorry that happened, but I think you've missed the lesson here:
Great technology isn't enough, you need the winning team and business side to go with it.
I'm not a fan of business things and legal issues either but they are needed and you can't go into situations without the smartest people on your side of the table...that's just how it works, unfortunately.
-davidu
Re:and for the dark side of Sarnoff.... (Score:2)
Hey - great. Pay the guys who came up with the great technology their fair share (or at least, the bargained price). Then go off to market it for millions in profit. There's nothing wrong with that.
I worked with Sarnoff's son (Score:2)
Sigh (Score:4, Insightful)
Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
I have no idea how anyone can compare this to an iMac. Hell, an average white box PC with a flat panel is about 10x more aesthetically pleasing.
Re:Um, no. (Score:2)
iMac (Score:1)
iMacs, windows, and the mouse (Score:2)
Re:iMacs, windows, and the mouse (Score:2)
True, but I think windows are more often associated with, um, Windows. It's a good point to remember though; whenever MS is bashed of copying technology ideas from Apple, it is not always Apple that first invented it. I'd like to think that both MS and Apple draw from the work of Xerox, and Apple has a better implementation by an order of magnitude.
I hope it was a reproduction (Score:2)
I've got a SAGE interceptor control console (Score:2)
http://boston.laszlosystems.com/photos/images/2
This is a console for controlling interceptor fighter jets. It was part of a SAGE (used a lot of vacuum-tubes) computer system.
Note the cigaratte lighter in the upper left of the righthand picture with the joystick.
Someday I'm going to put a computer into this thing.
lustworthy? (Score:2)
Fond Philco Memories (Score:2)
We had a black-n-white Philco when I was a little kid. When my Mom told me to turn off the TV and go to bed, I would insist on waiting for the little white dot to disappear. "Mom, nooo... the little white dot's not gone yet".
By the time I was a teenager, the Philco had be consigned to the basement for well over a decade, no longer used even as an emergency backup set.
I plugged the TV-output of my Commodore-64 into the Philco one day and for a few brief moments the up-and-coming technology of the digit
Re:One word..... (Score:3, Insightful)
Honest question (Score:2)
Somehow, I can't imagine Bill reacting that way to an Apple product launch, at least not publicly.
How is what Bill Gates might or might not say at all relevant to this story in any way, shape, or form?
Sometimes I think Slashdotters spend 90% of their lives just thinking about Bill Gates (I'm sorry--I forgot it's hip now to refer to him as just Bill or Billy).
This Island Earth (Score:2)
Meh, i want a desktop.-TV, what a gas. (Score:1, Interesting)
Impractical? (Score:2, Informative)
When is a case mod practical, aside from this one. [pimprig.com]
I remember finding a few of those old Philco's on the curb come trash day and they were nasty beasts. We dragged one home look through it and the shielding wasn't very good, if one of these things, and several were not very stable, fell over you could have a fire in short order. These things undoubtably predated consumer product saftety testing and who knows what kind of radiation they leaked. It didn't become much
Re:Memories (Score:3, Funny)
When I was a child, my parents put their "Penthouse" model in my bedroom
I've been trying to get a Penthouse model into my bedroom for years...Re:Great, so they destroyed a piece of tech histor (Score:2)