Computer History Museum Gets the Attention It Deserves 53
mcpublic writes "For years the Computer History Museum has been quietly collecting and displaying the computational relics of yesteryear. Now, finally the New York Times Arts Section shines the spotlight on this most nerdy of museums. Speak Steampunk? You can find a working replica of Babbage's Difference Engine in the lobby of the museum's Mountain View, California home. Of course, the vast majority of the collection is electronic, and though 'big iron' is king, that hasn't stopped dedicated volunteers from bringing back to life pioneering 'mini' computers like the 1960 PDP-1 and the first video game software ever: Spacewar!"
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And my Commodore PET never had fur. I was so disappointed :(
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Imagine how upset I was with my Amiga...
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you might want to check the your pipes since i do not see "bits made out of wood" in the linked article.
and i know of a set of (plastic) counters that are used to teach number so "bits" could be made out of wood
Re:Bits were never made out of wood (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Bits were never made out of wood (Score:4, Informative)
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Lol no mod points too bad
Berlin's Computerspielemuseum (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.computerspielemuseum.de/1210_Home.htm
Visited this summer. They have quite a collection of computer games.
Re:Berlin's Computerspielemuseum (Score:5, Informative)
You should definitely check out the Heinz Nixdorf museum [www.hnf.de] in Padenborn, Germany. It's the largest collection of old computers on display anywhere in the world. Make sure you get the English audio tour from the reception though, as nearly all of the texts within the museum are written in German.
It truly is an awesome place, with lots of wonderful machines, including (but by no means limited to) a piece of a Jacquard loom, a real German WW2 Enigma, lots of huge old IBM machines, a full Zuse Z11 (including a modified typewriter to function as printer!), some PDP's, a Xerox Alto, an Altair 8800, an Apple I. One could spend a week in there, it's simply amazing.
Re:Berlin's Computerspielemuseum (Score:4, Funny)
Make sure you get the English audio tour from the reception though, as nearly all of the texts within the museum are written in German.
Ich spreche Deutsch, du unempfindlichen Klotz
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Well even if you are able to comprehend the German texts, I'd still recommend you get the multimedia tour, as it is a great way to guide you through the museum. Without it, you can't help but feel a bit lost, as there is just so much to see there. And there's some pictures and video's there as well which aren't featured in the museum itself, so if you're a completionist, that's a good reason too to invest another 2 euro's into the little HTC Android box they give you to tour the museum with.
You are not alone (Score:5, Insightful)
FYI Another "Working Computer Museum" up since about 15 years in Palazzolo Acreide, Sicily, nearby Siracusa,
privately run by volunteers and collectors: http://museum.dyne.org/ [dyne.org]
(website in Italian and some english, remote access to computers offered via telnet and ssh)
Definitely the way to go. Wait another 20 years and we'll all be establishment
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This is *vitally* important (Score:4, Insightful)
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Core Memory (Score:5, Interesting)
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These things would have been threaded with three 46 gauge wires each. They had machines to make that easier, but not quite automatic. http://www.nixiebunny.com/ibmcore/ibmcore.html [nixiebunny.com]
Others call it "boxes of junk in your work room" (Score:5, Funny)
I call it, "Computer History Museum!"
Every geek has one of these museums at home: cables with biomorph connectors, interfaces to nowhere, Ninja Star shaped floppy disks, 1K ICs, a smokey fan . . .
You just can't part with this stuff . . . you WILL find a use for it someday . . .
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Ah, so true. Oldest piece of computer history I have is a 4 kilobit core, though many of the bits have broken off of it. Apple II disk controller cards, 4116 memories, random power supplies, various Macs, any number of modems...
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I need a museum museum (Score:3)
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When the Boston museum closed, I'm not sure how much of a loss that was. Most of the computers were new PCs running displays showing all the neato things new PCs could do. The ones that weren't were Amigas and Ataris, but they were all covered with painted wooden boxes and wrapping paper, so you couldn't tell what they were, because that would involve showing actual computer history. The Macs had their own room with huge Apple banners all over the place, and all the machines were running game-quality edu
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Highlights of my visit (Score:3)
Sitting on a Cray, and seeing the Utah teapot.
Meanwhile In Europe (Score:5, Interesting)
For those of us on the other side of the pond there is a reasonably good computer history museum at Bletchley Park. The computer section at the Science Museum in London is also well worth a visit providing you remember that the Pilot Ace is on the ground floor.
Ganty
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as one living in continental Europe: I never had the feeling that the UK believed it is part of the continent. The Channels seems to be wider than the Atlantic...
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The Channels seems to be wider than the Atlantic...
I remember once visiting my Grandparents' home near Dover and noticing they could see France out their kitchen window. I was stunned to learn that while they had visited us in Canada, they'd never been to France. Not once. When I asked why, their reply was simple: "Because it's full of French people, dear."
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-- YACHM: http://museum.dyne.org/ [dyne.org]
Dumbed down musums (Score:3)
Classic science and engineering museums have been dumbed down. The Smithsonian used to be hard core, back when they were in the Arts and Industries building. The assumption was that visitors knew something about the subject and were there to see the historic original. The Henry Ford Museum used to be hard-core. ("Capacitor, Cornell-Dublier, 1932"), but they added more "explanatory" exhibits.
The South Kensington Science Museum (now the "London Science Museum") has gone soft, too. I saw it in 1985 and 2002, and it felt dumber in 2002. They still have Maudsley's lathe (the first really good machine tool) on display. But the collection of James Bond cars from movies was getting the attention.
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Capacitor, Cornell-Dublier, 1932
Awesome, I'm using that name if I ever sign up for a /. account!
I'm using it if I ever start a rock band.
Time marches on. (Score:2)
The Smithsonian used to be hard core, back when they were in the Arts and Industries building. The assumption was that visitors knew something about the subject and were there to see the historic original.
Placing technology in its historical and social context is part of the job of the modern museum.
Rosa Parks Bus [hfmgv.org]. Driving America [thehenryford.org]
How much can you learn from a static display ---- how much more from the dynamic?
John Bull: Riding the Rails [youtube.com]
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" I saw it in 1985 and 2002, and it felt dumber in 2002. "
chances are, you were dumber in 1985 and the "musums" have stayed the same.
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chances are, you were dumber in 1985
Unlikely [ietf.org], unless he regressed from 1984 to 1985.
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It's not clear whether he grew dumber or smarter, but he certainly made the transition from respected engineer to patent troll [animats.com] effectively enough.
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Agreed about the radio, electronics display; on my last trip to the Henry Ford, I was sorely disappointed it was largely gone. I prefer museums that are mostly conservationists, vs. the educational focus; they apparently pay the bills by turning the museum into a field trip destination for schoolchildren. Compared to many, many years ago at the Henry Ford where they had much of their vast collection on display, from steam tractors, dynamos the size of a house, old vacuum cleaners, to electron tubes, much of
Good to see more attention (Score:3)
It's great to see computer history getting some more attention. Many people like to turn up their nose at anything "old", but there is much that can be learned from computing history. There was much innovation and not all ideas were fully explored.
And the mistakes of history are repeating themselves. Anyone who thinks touch screens are new should look up the 1983 HP 150 touch screen computer.
You will look silly in 20 years (Score:2)
When they trot out an iPad 2 (which has more LINPACK compute power than a Cray-2 BTW)
Core Threading Machine (Score:1)
The Attention it DESERVES! (Score:1)
Because we all know that nothing really exists until it's acknowledged by a parochial east coast newspaper.