Computer History Museum Launches Digital Portal to Its Collection

Posted by ChrisArchitect 5 hours ago

Counter77Comment17OpenOriginal

Comments

Comment by frsandstone 3 hours ago

Comment by mrandish 55 minutes ago

This is very welcome. Just a couple months ago I was down some interesting retro-computing rabbit hole and there was a story referenced in a couple articles and a book. The cited source was an original document that's in CHM's collection but it wasn't accessible on CHM's site nor was it available anywhere else online. Frustrating but understandable. They must get mountains of documents contributed from personal files of first-hand participants who created this history.

Sorting, scanning, indexing and tagging all those loose files must be a Herculean yet monotonously thankless chore. So thanks to all the volunteers and donors for enabling this invaluable resource to exist.

Comment by joshuamcginnis 48 minutes ago

If you're into this and you're ever in Bozeman Montana, check out the American Computer and Robotics Museum. It's excellent!

https://acrmuseum.org/

Comment by davidmurphy 2 hours ago

CHM employee here. Always great to see CHM on HN. Glad folks are excited about this -- as are we! There's so much cool stuff in the Collection.

Comment by runamuck 2 hours ago

Ooh check out the Discovery wall! I see a Furby, a Power Glove (call AVGN) and a Ninja Turtles NES Game: https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/discovery

Comment by Bukhmanizer 1 hour ago

This place is great, but my work had a function here and I walked around with one of our juniors and never have I felt so old. The pure astonishment and confusion when looking at a “floppy disk” aged me instantly.

Comment by ebruchez 1 hour ago

I suppose that means the museum is doing its job then: educate people totally ignorant of the history of computing. Next time that younger person sees a floppy disk they will know what it is.

Comment by Bukhmanizer 44 minutes ago

Absolutely!

Comment by hoofedear 2 hours ago

This is really awesome. The CHM is one of my favorite places in the world. I had applied for a web developer position there not too long ago, great to see them expand things online like this

Comment by jsphweid 1 hour ago

I've been to this museum ~10 times. It never gets old. I take everyone I know there. I like to see their reactions.

New portal looks kinda cool too.

Comment by JKCalhoun 3 hours ago

I have come across (and enjoyed) many of the videos [1] they have posted to YouTube.

[1] https://www.youtube.com/@ComputerHistory

Comment by Robdel12 3 hours ago

This is realllly cool. I have a rabbit hole to go down into tonight

Comment by ricksunny 2 hours ago

I'm a fan of CHM. That said there collections have (understandably) a rather Silicon-Valley-legacy-centric view of, erm, computer history. You'll find little mention, for example, of these tantalizing early mentions of alternative computer architectures (with pictures!) in NSA's predecessor OP-20-G, as posed alongside the then-nascent von Neumann architecture (also covered).

https://www.governmentattic.org/8docs/NSA-WasntAllMagic_2002...

Comment by belter 2 hours ago

Comment by ChrisArchitect 5 hours ago

Comment by ChrisArchitect 2 hours ago

Related, of the more in-person variety:

Favorite Tech Museums

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46504220

Comment by tonymet 36 minutes ago

This is great, though every geek should visit this place in person. It gets better every year. Especially on the days where they demo the giant IBM 1401.

My buddy took me on a Silicon Valley tour when I lived there , we hit up the HP Garage, Apple Garage, Intel Museum & the Computer History Museum in one day.