Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 18:20 UTC
Geek stuff, sci-fi... The mission of the newly re-opened Computer History Museum (CHM) in Mountain View, California, is to preserve and present for posterity the artifacts and stories of the information age. As such, we wouldn't miss the opportunity to visit the museum last weekend, trying to be part and have a "feel" of how computers where like before the desktop home computers took off only two decades ago. Before that time, computers were much different, and I am sure that every geek on this planet would like to witness how they looked and felt like. Read more for the report and plenty of pictures from our visit.
Order by: Score:

Well, they missed a big part of it...
by Kilian on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 06:47 UTC

No mentioning of Konrad Zuse, His Z3 was the first fully functional, program controlled (freely programmable) computer of the world.

The Z3 was presented on May 12, 1941 to an audience of scientists in Berlin. The Mark II, the ENIAC and the Colossus followed 1943 and later.

His Z1 http://irb.cs.tu-berlin.de/~zuse/Konrad_Zuse/en/Rechner_Z1.html was built between 1936 and 1938, but got destroyed during the war.

Here are some links:
http://irb.cs.tu-berlin.de/~zuse/Konrad_Zuse/en/Rechner_Z3.html
http://www.epemag.com/zuse/
http://www.rtd-net.de/Z3-e.html

RE: Well, they missed a big part of it...
by Eugenia on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 06:48 UTC

Did you not check the pictures? We have a picture of Z3. It is there on display, we saw it (part of it of course).

It's quite an old site
by Timothy on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 07:36 UTC

I remember visiting it some 5 years ago. I guess you should register a domain like oshistory.org and put all those screenshots you can have into it :-)

Hey, the domain oshistory.org is free :)
by Timothy on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 07:37 UTC

Can I get some money for the idea? :-)

RE: It's quite an old site
by Eugenia on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 07:39 UTC

Erm, what does the site's design has to do with the museum? Their web site always gets updated when they have news btw, the design might be the same as before, who really cares? It it works, no need to change it. ;)

Boston
by Scot Hacker on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 08:01 UTC

Very nice photography! As with architecture, few computers today are as aesthetically interesting today as they once were.

I visited the Computer Museum in Boston about 7 years ago and it was also great. Afterwards there was a charity auction and I watched someone spend $10,000 on an Apple II motherboard autographed by Jobs and Woz.

Great Article...
by Omar on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 08:07 UTC

I love seeing this sort of thing on OS news. Thanks for the article :-)

oshistory.org
by goo.. on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 08:53 UTC

Good idea, many of the modern OS concepts are actually 20-30 years old would give people some perspective. OTOH it will be probably DOSed by mac users in a matter of seconds.

Anyway, great photography. I wish I could visit there myself ;)

Nice
by DaaT on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 09:35 UTC

Nice article Eugenia, very interesting.

Nice pictures; no bloat
by Will on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 11:09 UTC

Thanks for the article and pictures Eugenia. Seeing the pictures of those devices brings to mind a thought about programming. Those were the days of very lean programs and bloat was a No No.

Unfortunately today computer software makers blatently exploit inexpensive hardware. Maybe if RAM prices went back to 1980s level there would be incentive to write leaner code.

RE: Nice picutres; no bloat
by Nick on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 11:35 UTC

are you telling me that you want RAM to go back the 1980 levels so you don't have to worry about bloat-ware? Anybody else find that to be the most absurd comment anybody has heard yet. The reason there is bloat-ware is because people want instant software and are unable to wait 5 years for a new release. In addition people want a bundle of features included, that is why business people prefer MS Office over Open Office. Open Office has a lot of good features it's just no where near the level of Microsoft.

Software museums
by motta on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 11:53 UTC

I don't know how this museum handles it, but the ones I saw (in Europe) all just displayed the hardware, without also showing the software that run on it. I thought this is higly frustrating. In my opinion, software deserved to be preserved for future generations just like hardware, literature and paintings.

I mean, it's nice to know how an Alto looks like powered off, but I want to know how it feels like working with it. I not interested in a Lisp machine because it's huge and loud, but because it ran a highly integrated and flexible OS which probably could still serve as a source of inspiration for todays UI designers. Lots of software are probably already lost forever (try finding a copy of WorldWideWeb, the first web client. There are still some floating around on the net, but it is surprisingly hard, and it's only ten years old), and licensing and hardware requirements make a personal collection hard. Are there any museums that care about software stuff?

UK : Turing, Sinclair
by chris brooksbank on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 11:56 UTC

Is this museum just for USA or does it include UK info. e.g. UK built first ever electronic computer, info on Alan Turing.

PDP-11 Memories
by chemicalscum on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 12:23 UTC

Great article Eugenia. I Loved the pictures. The first computer I used was a PDP-11 back in 1975 just like the one in the picture. I remember having it pulled out from the racking with the cards exposed just like there.

It has ferrite core memory and I can still remember how light a semiconductor replacement board felt compared to the ferrite core. Our machine had 48Kb memory better than the standard 32Kb. To boot he system you had to manually input an octal bootstrap sequence via the switches on the front panel. Oh memories!

Thanks!
by Jay on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 12:51 UTC

Great article, Eugenia! Wow, I always wanted to see a PDP-8, which the hackers at MIT used!!!

PDP-11
by gabe on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 13:34 UTC

How exactly does one USE that thing? I've played with some emulators before, but I've never really found anything that explained how it worked, or how you got any output from flipping those switches.

I'm amazed that I lived down the road from that place for over a year and never knew it was there. Now that I live near Boston I'll have to check out the museum there.

Re Thanks
by chemicalscum on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 13:50 UTC

"I always wanted to see a PDP-8, which the hackers at MIT used!!!"

BTW My next computer after the PDP-11 was moving backwards to a PDP-8(with 7 inch (or something like that) floppies instead of the 10 inch 2.4 MB cartridge hard drive. It didn't look like the picture. The kit at the bottom of the picture looks similar. We didn't have the stuff that looks like a pair of HiFi speakears on top. I guess they are some sort of peripheral, since they have reflecting front panels maybe there are tape drive behind. Is the picture of the PDP-8 the one that the first UNIX ran on in which case it's a holy ikon.

At the old SGI building eh?
by al_pettit11 on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 13:51 UTC

That brings back memories..
Did some Onyx2 training in that building.

Thanks, good article
by foo on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 13:51 UTC

I love how mechanical some of this stuff is... check out those belt-driven hard disks! Kinda makes me wish I'd experienced them (my first was an Apple IIe). Thanks Eugenia.

Great article.
by cheezwog on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 14:03 UTC

Great article, nice pictures too.
BTW, the goverment defense computer, SAGE, that you refer to has some installations working until spring 1983. They had an availability of 99.97% during their working life. Not bad for a 55,000 tube computer working with magnetic core and drum memory!

Re: PDP-11
by chemicalscum on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 14:04 UTC

With my system ( circa 1975) which had a 10 inch 2.4 MB cartridge hard drive, you first manually inputed a four word octal bootstrap sequence via the switches on the front panel. This then booted the hard drive that had the operating system on it - called RT-11. Our system had the DEC BASIC (a Dartmouth type basic) and FORTRAN IV. We were using it for real time data aquisition from a Mass Spectrometer using an ADC and running the instrument manufacturers proprietary software.

For those of you old enough to remember CP/M but who haven't used an old DEC machine, CP/M is very similar in command structure to the old DEC 16 bit operating systems RT-11 and OS-8 (for the PDP-8). This is because Gary Kildall who founded DR once worked for DEC as an operating system software engineer. Oh the good old days of using PIP - the peripheral interchange program. I think I can still remember the syntax now.

two decades ago
by Luis Alejandro Masanti on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 14:08 UTC

As Eugenia says: "...of how computers where like before the desktop home computers took off only two decades ago."

In January 24th, 1984 (just nineteen and a half years ago) Apple Computer intrduced Macintosh "So 1984 (the year) won't be like 1984 (the book)".

And the desktop world changed!

Re: UK : Turing, Sinclair
by JBQ on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 14:57 UTC

The museum indeed mostly contains US artifacts. There are obviously a few exceptions (an enigma, part of the Z3, an early NEC transistor-based machine to name a few that I remember), but those are exceptions indeed. There are a few small Sinclair machines (ZX81, Spectrum, QL), but once again those are just an exception. I'm very sure that the museum would accept donations...

I played lunar lander on a PDP-11
by Anonymous on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 15:09 UTC

My first computer use was playing lunar lander on a PDP-11....monchrome vector graphics and a light pen...the Commodore64 was blazingly fast in comparison!

Re: pictures
by JBQ on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 15:55 UTC

Thanks for the comments about the pictures (I took them). I guess that not everyone is as picky as I am about them, as I would probably have kept maybe half a dozen of them at most, but Eugenia insisted that I scan everything so that she could pick.

Sorry for the dust and the funky greenish colors (caused by the fluorescent light), I didn't have the time to properly scan the negatives so I just set the scanner in "automated batch" mode.

Hopefully we'll go again, and this time I'll rent a faster/wider lens and maybe use faster film, hoping to use a polarizer to cut through those pesky reflections.

pb170
by Masao[RY] on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 16:11 UTC

Wow, this article makes me want to drag out the old PB165 and take her for a spin...

RE: Software museums
by tom on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 16:52 UTC

Hi,

> I mean, it's nice to know how an Alto looks like powered
> off, but I want to know how it feels like working with it.

Hmmmm yes! But the problem is that all those old media like tapes, disks or punch cards ain't made for eternity.

> (try finding a copy of WorldWideWeb, the first web client.
> There are still some floating around on the net, but it is
> surprisingly hard, and it's only ten years old),

http://www.peanuts.org/peanuts/NEXTSTEP/connectivity/www/

You'll only need the right OS ;)

> Are there any museums that care about software stuff?

Try private collectors - many of them have their hardware still workable with OS and applications.

Good luck,
tom

RE: Software museums
by whaaa on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 17:23 UTC

Try attending a vintage computer meeting, a lot of hobbyist go there to meet and exchange information. Most of them bring some of their warez with them, part of the fun of restoring an old computer is to actually get it to "original" condition including software. I have had lots of fun at a few of those meetings during the years... plus you get to actually see old computers running whatever it was they were meant to compute ;)

no more Boston museum
by jeffrey boulier on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 17:36 UTC

I'm amazed that I lived down the road from that place for over a year and never knew it was there. Now that I live near Boston I'll have to check out the museum there.

I believe that the Boston museum doesn't exist anymore. Some things were sold, others shipped to California.

Is there still a huge computer history collection at Moffet Field, or did it all go to this place?

Yours truly,
Jeffrey Boulier

Nice!
by Slakje on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 17:47 UTC

Sounds strange from someone who loves BeOS, but I hadn't actually SEEN a BeBox in my life until just now...

Too bad I live in a country where you can't even buy a decent Linux distribution...

baby girtl what are we gonna do?
by roybatty on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 18:15 UTC

Euginia....we're going to be jonesing hard when you leave. We love you:)

Great article, Eugenia, OSNews!
by Jace on Wed 23rd Jul 2003 21:59 UTC

This is a place I have wanted to visit for some time. I just can't make it a practical trip. Maybe on my eventual ride out west to relocate...

I also considered making my own "consumer computer" museum but I don't have the time, money or resources. (So I just collect the cool stuff from my youth, like Tandy computers, and the neat but abandoned things, like Newton, etc).

Thanks for the article and thanks even more for the pictures!

Re. Nice!
by The-Q on Thu 24th Jul 2003 00:50 UTC

<em>Too bad I live in a country where you can't even buy a decent Linux distribution...</em>

What? This is just understatement! A few of the best OSS developers I know are from NL....
You can' be serious!

Museum to be Scrapped for Metal
by Pahtz on Thu 24th Jul 2003 04:48 UTC

I heard the Australian Computer Museum and all of it's exhibits could be headed for the scrap heap soon if no Angel saves it. I thought it would be appropriate to give it a mention in the hopes some such person(s) are reading.

It will take them 6 months to move out of their present location so they'd have to start junking computers about now. Perhaps OSNews might like to e-mail them for an update.

News Article:
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/05/19/1053196515142.html

Home Page:
http://www.terrigal.net.au/~acms/

-----

MEDIA RELEASE
For immediate release
March, 2003
Australian Computer Museum Society Inc LAUNCHES
APPEAL FOR ‘Working Computer Museum’ SITE
and 'Hall of Fame' for Australian Computing Pioneers.

The Australian Computer Museum Society Inc (ACMS) has launched its public appeal for funding of a ‘Working Computer Museum’. The 'Working Museum' will allow the ACMS to begin implementing its primary educational aims. We only need $5 million (approx) to get established.
The ACMS was formed in 1994 to preserve and protect Australia’s computing heritage. The 'Hall of Fame' will be dedicated to all those Australians who have been directly involved in the development of the Computer industry.
The community response over the past 8 years has been so successful that the ACMS now has over 10,000 items in its cramped storage facility in the western suburbs of Sydney. Individual members have thousands of extra items stored in their homes or garages for future generations to appreciate.
The establishment of the ‘Working Computer Museum’ will be a major step forward in the ACMS program to establish regional exhibition sites around Australia. The current need is for about 3000 square metres of storage space and 1000 square metres of display space for working displays and a library, a theatrette, a restoration workshop and multi-media facilities.
Michael Capellas, Chairman and CEO of Compaq, said in 2002 “Two decades is a long time in the technology business, and the last 20 years have seen more change than any similar stretch of time in the relatively brief history of the IT industry.”
The ACMS President, David Hawley, B.Sc. said ".. Australia's computing heritage goes back 80 years to the development of mechanical totalisators by Sir George Julius who later became the first chairman of the CSIR (later CSIRO)". The ACMS has a duty to record and publicise the works of all the early Australian computing pioneers, especially those inventors such as Trevor Pearcey and Maston Beard who built CSIRAC (Australia's first electronic computer) in 1949.
Computer historian and Past President, Graeme Philipson has said " The computer industry is now old enough to have a history. If we do not preserve that history it will disappear forever". Already, many hundreds of rare items are lost.
The ACMS Collection Officer has said ".. it is not generally recognised that Australia has been a market place for calculators and computers from all over the world and hence there has been a greater diversity of equipment used here than almost anywhere else in the world. For this reason we need a fully funded Working Computer Museum - not only for school and university students, but for future researchers and for posterity and for generations to come."
www.acms.org.au
SOME RARE LOCAL COMPUTER ITEMS IN THE COLLECTION:
Original Electronics Australia micro-computer (first kit 1974)
Pre-PC micro-computers such as the MicroBee.
EAI Analog Computers from the 1960s.
Power Station Control Computer - 16 cabinets from Torrens Island in S.A., combined analog/digital system, based on germanium transistors that was in service for 33 years.
A CP/M computer used for the first automated version of the Macquarie Dictionary.
Six systems from the CompuServe Pacific Bureau, a 1970s Time-Sharing bureau.
A 1970s Sybron-Taylor oil refinery control computer - retrieved from Marrickville.
The W.A. Chapter has a Bendix G15, and portion of a DEC PDP-6 and a LEO system.
_________________________
Systems Wanted:-
IBM System 360 (working) with Card Reader
Items from SILLIAC, UTECOM, CIRRUS, and any other Australian computers pre 1970.
Traffic Analysis computer as built in late 1960s at Uni of NSW for A.R.R.B. project.
New members to assist with collection of oral histories from Computer Pioneers.
------------------------------------------
Most of the working exhibits will come from the 1970s and 1980s mini-computers and mainframe collection together with many micro-computers from all over the world.
The ACMS is seeking assistance with both storage space and running expenses.
All prospective donors and sponsors are requested to contact the Secretary, Max Burnet in the first instance on 02- 9484 6772, or e-mail mburnet@bigpond.net.au
FOR FURTHER TECHNICAL INFORMATION
John Geremin, Honorary Treasurer, ACMS Inc. Ph: 02- 9642 5564, Mobile: 0427 10 20 60
John Deane, Publications Officer, ACMS Inc. Ph: 02- 9372 4429
or e-mail to acms.admin@terrigal.net.au
ACMS Inc - Preserving Australia's Computing Heritage
The Australian Computer Museum Society has no employees or government funding to support its educational aims and objectives. The ACMS relies very heavily on its members and voluntary workers to maintain the current collection, most of which is still waiting to be tested and formally catalogued.
The ACMS Inc is endorsed as a Charity and as a Deductable Gift Recipient by the Australian Tax Office under Subdivision 30-B of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
<end>

RE: Museum to be Scrapped for Metal
by ELQ on Thu 24th Jul 2003 05:28 UTC

I updated the story with your information. Hopefully someone high up might read it and save it.

I noticed there was a reference in the article to a "first home computer from 1971 that "no one knows about"". Could this be the computer designed and built by Finnish physicist/inventor Erkki Kurenniemi? The machine he created would have been in existence around this time, a couple of years before other, more prominent examples.

I've been reading a number of articles about this gentleman, and his activites (in building innovative early electronic musical instruments mainly), and there's also a documentary film about him, which was recently released on DVD ("The Future Is Not What It Used To Be"). A fascinating character to say the least, and a largely forgotten pioneer in many fields.

RE: no more Boston museum
by John C Green Jr on Thu 24th Jul 2003 20:23 UTC

The Mt. View CA based museum started in 1996 as a branch of The Computer Museum [Boston]. The branch was called The Computer Museum History Center and had the charter of the original The Computer Museum, preserving and displaying for posterity the artifacts and stories of The Information Age.
Most of the collection was moved from Boston to Mt. View in 1996. A few items including a Univac stayed in Boston.

Later The Computer Museum History History Center split from The Computer Museum, got its own 501(3)c status, and changed its name to The Computer History Museum. Soon after that The Computer Museum merged with The Science Museum. Eventually The Computer Museum let its 501(3)c status lapse so it no longer exists. Its modest collection is just part of The Science Museum.

The Computer History Museum was initially located entirely
at Moffett Field. Last year they bought 7.5 acres at 1401 Shoreline Dr., Mt. View CA including a 118K sq.ft. building originally built by Silicon Graphics Inc. The public displays opened to the public at the new location 02JUN2003.

Like any museum of this type e.g. Museum of Science and Industry (Chicago), Deutches Museum (Munchen) only 10-20% of the collection is on display at any given time. The rest is in dense storage. Most of the Computer History Museum collection is in dense storage at Moffett Field and is not available for public display.

Unlike The Computer Museum and The Austrailian Computer Museum, the Computer History Museum understands that such a museum must be endowed. They are raising $100 Million, 2/3 of which will be an endowment, before they open as a proper museum, open all day every day. For the time being the Visable Storage collection is open only 12 hours per month and is staffed by volunteer docents.

Loved the S360 photo!
by Different Jay on Fri 25th Jul 2003 03:58 UTC

My Dad was a field engineer at IBM for about 30 years. I remember him mentioning working on "360's".

At one time (many years later) he was issued a "portable" computer, i.e. "luggable," an IBM model that looked an awful lot like the Osbourne pictured at the Computer Museum's site.

You can bet I'll be forwarding their URL to him!

As for me, I want my computer to come with a built-in ashtray, like the "Weapons Control Console." Hey, when you're in control of computerized weapons, I guess you might just want to smoke to calm your nerves. Ah, those were the days.

Of course, a card reader would just put the icing on the cake - but an ashtray is a nice start. Just watch out for kids stashing their gum in it.

Weapons Director console with ashtray...
by Gordon Pearce on Fri 25th Jul 2003 11:43 UTC

... and is that not a car dashboard-style fag lighter socket beside it? That has got to be the funniest thing I've seen!