Wednesday 12 December 2007

Tech legacy preserved in Computer History Museum

The old machines represent where we those of us in the computer field came from said Wozniak . They tell a story of amazing inventions even when the inventors had no idea what it would lead to. Some donors must be convinced that equipment and ephemera such as manuals software and sales brochures are worth saving. Apple s plan Dubinsky donated an early Palm Pilot designed by the handheld computer company she started in . Those papers eventually will be available for public viewing said Shustek chairman of the museum s board. A cabinet of calculators displays Hewlett Packard s HP the first handheld machine to perform trigonometric functions. The device made the slide rule obsolete Hewlett Packard says. Every object is pregnant with politics and meaning far beyond the technical said Dag Spicer senior curator. It was displayed in Boston starting in before a plan emerged to create a nonprofit center in California. The museum which opened in attracted more than v! isitors last year and has a . Cray started in Minnesota is now based in Seattle. The museum is working on an exhibit of objects that will show a timeline of computing history. It s also collecting oral histories with visionaries such as Internet pioneer Vint Cerf. What we re saving are the fascinating stories behind the artifacts.

Source: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2004066478_techmuseum12.html


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Pretty much not much notable happening these days, but shrug. So it goes. What can I say? My life's been really dull today, but whatever. Such is life. Pfft.

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