Showing posts with label ibm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ibm. Show all posts

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Computer History Museum (Part 3) - Mountain View, CA

On 1 April, 2023, my dad and I went to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA. The address of the museum is at 1401 N Shoreline Blvd, Mountain View, CA 94043. I had a great time geeking out on old technology. While most of the things I saw were way before my time (such as punch card programing), I had a great time seeing all of the Commodore computers, Apple computers, and the historic game consoles. I'm a total computer geek. 😂 It has been a decade since I went to this museum and I have been wanting to go again. I took cellphone photos at the museum, and the photos are split into 4 parts. I took way too many photos on this trip. I hope you enjoy viewing my photos.

Museum Tip: If you are a Bank of America customer and cardholder, you can visit many museums for free on the first full weekend of each month. You can find more information about the program here.

Parts: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

This is part 3 of my cellphone photos from the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA.

This blog post starts off with photos of vintage video game consoles and video game cartridges.

Atari Pong Prototype (1972)

Atari Super Pong Game (1976)(left) & Coleco Telstar Alpha (1977)(right)

Atari 2600 Game Console with "Combat" Game Cartridge (1978)

Atari 5200 Game Console

Atari Game Cartridges: Breakout (1978), Missile Command (1980), Defender (1982), Video Pinball (1980)

Coleco Namco Pac-Man Tabletop Game (1985)

Nintendo Game Boy (1989)(center left), Nintendo Entertainment System (center), NES Metroid Game Cartridge (1987)(top left), NES Tetris Game Cartridge (top right)

IBM PC/MS-DOS Interactive Fiction Games: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (left) & Leather Goddesses of Phobos (right)

Atari Namco Pac-Man Game Cartridge (1982)

NES Game Cartridges (top to bottom): Pinball (1985), Super Mario Bros & Duck Hunt (1985), Dr. Mario (1990), Metroid (1987)

NES Game Cartridges (top to bottom): Wheel of Fortune Family Edition (1988), The Legend of Zelda (1988), Millipede (1988), Tetris (1985)

Doom II for IBM PC/MS-DOS (1994)

Super Nintendo Entertainment System (1990)(top) & Sega Dreamcast (1998)(bottom)

Sega Saturn Game Console (1994)(left) & Nintendo 64 Game Console (1996)(right)

Microsoft XBOX Game Console (2001)

I'm somewhat of a vintage game nerd too, so I had a great time seeing the vintage game consoles at the museum as well.

IBM ThinkPad 701 Laptop with Butterfly Keyboard (1995)

Apple Powerbook 140 Laptop (1991)

Apple iPhone (2007)

Motorola Bluetooth Headset (2005)

I feel kind of old now seeing the original iPhone and a Motorola Bluetooth headset in a museum. 😂 While I have never used an iPhone (and I'm not planning on getting one), I did use those Motorola Bluetooth headsets growing up. In fact there is one from the year 2007-2008 on my desk right now. I plan to continue using it again. I found it in the backyard several months ago.

This is all the photos for today. I hope you have enjoyed viewing the photos! Please don't forget to share the blog post with your friends and family members! Also, if you want to get notifications when I post up more photos, "Like" us on Facebook or follow me on Instagram. These links can also be found on the top of the right sidebar.

Parts: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Sunday, April 2, 2023

Computer History Museum (Part 1) - Mountain View, CA

On 1 April, 2023, my dad and I went to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA. The address of the museum is at 1401 N Shoreline Blvd, Mountain View, CA 94043. I had a great time geeking out on old technology. While most of the things I saw were way before my time (such as punch card programing), I had a great time seeing all of the Commodore computers, Apple computers, and the historic game consoles. I'm a total computer geek. 😂 It has been a decade since I went to this museum and I have been wanting to go again. I took cellphone photos at the museum, and the photos are split into 4 parts. I took way too many photos on this trip. I hope you enjoy viewing my photos.

Museum Tip: If you are a Bank of America customer and cardholder, you can visit many museums for free on the first full weekend of each month. You can find more information about the program here.

Parts: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

This is part 1 of my cellphone photos from the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA.

Abacuses from China, Korea, Japan, and Russia.

Curta Calculators

IBM Dayton 26 LB Scale (1925)(left), International Time Recording Company Employee Time Clock (1913)(center), IBM Type 11 Electric Keypunch (1923)(right)
The clock in the center was used to keep record of employee work hours.

Telefunken RAT 700/2 Analog Computer (1959)

Enigma Machine (1935)

Books on FORTRAN Programming (1964)

Top Row (left to right): Fantasia Laserdisc (1991), TDK CD (2010), TDK DVD
Middle Row (left to right): Memorex 8" Floppy Disk (1974), 5.25" Floppy Drive (1976), Steve jobs with an Apple II (1979), 3M 5.25" Floppy Disk, Sony 3.5" Floppy Drive (1982), Iomega ZIP 100 Drive (1994), Iomega ZIP Disk (1994)
Bottom Row (left to right): IBM 3480 200MB Tape Cartridge (1984), DEC CompacTape Cartridge (1984), IBM 3850 50MB Mass Storage System Cartridge (1974)

Fun Fact: I'm still using my 3.5" floppy disks. These things are surprisingly resilient. I recently got a Dell USB floppy disk drive after pulling out 20+ year old floppies from the attic. The data were all still intact. Maybe that is why they don't have any 3.5" floppy disks on display at the museum. It is too recent. 😂 I back up small files onto them.

Left Column (top to bottom): Toshiba 1.8" Disk Drive for Apple iPod (2001), IBM Microdrive (1999), Conner Peripherals CP-344 42MB HDD (1983)
Right Column (top to bottom): Apple iPod 10GB (2002), SanDisk 1GB Memory Stick (2000)

Memorex 8" Floppy Disk (1974)

3M 5.25" Floppy Disk

Left Column (top to bottom): Atari Game Cartridge PCB (1976), Rio PMP300 MP3 Player (1998)
Right Column (top to bottom): SanDisk IBM SSD Module (1990), Atari Namco Pac-Man Game Cartridge (1982)

Silicon Wafers

Phonograph Recording Cylinder (1930)

Reproduction Incan Quipu
Incans used these between 1400AD to 1532 AD. It was knotted and used as record keeping devices.

Control Data Corporation Storage Cartridge (left), Verbatim DataLife 5.25" Floppy Disk (center), 3M DC 600A Data Cartridge (right)

IBM 7094 Console Computer (1962) used by NASA in Mercury & Gemini space flights.

UNIX Programmer's Manual (1971)(left), and Novelty UNIX License Plate (1980) & Novelty UNIX Button (1983)(right).

Neiman-Marcus/Honeywell Kitchen Computer (1969)
Neiman-Marcus in 1969 marketed this computer for the kitchen which costs $10,600. It also came with a cookbook, an apron, and a two week programming course. The computer portion was a Honeywell 316 minicomputer. None of it sold. I'm going to guess it was too expensive, too confusing, and too hard to use. This ended up being a failed product.

Texas Instruments Speak & Spell (1978)(top left), Sinclair ZX Spectrum (1982), Commodore PET Personal Computer (center), Fairchild "Channel F" Game Cartridges (1976)

This is all the photos for today. I hope you have enjoyed viewing the photos! Please don't forget to share the blog post with your friends and family members! Also, if you want to get notifications when I post up more photos, "Like" us on Facebook or follow me on Instagram. These links can also be found on the top of the right sidebar.

Parts: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Saturday, January 19, 2019

CES Las Vegas Day 1 (Part 2)

I attended CES (Consumer Electronics Show) 2019 in Las Vegas, NV. I went the last 2 days of the convention. I saw quite some cool tech there. I shot cellphone photos and DSLR photos at the event. The photos will be split into several blog posts. Use the links below to navigate.

Parts:
These are my DSLR photos from day 1. I split the photos from day 1 into 2 blog posts. This is part 2.

Full Resolution Photos: If you want to see full resolution photos of any of the photos you see here, use the following links. If you wish to purchase prints of any of the photos, please contact me here. To see my best photos from CES 2015 to CES 2019, use this link. To see all of my DSLR photos from the 2019 convention, use this link.

Horizon Robotics Dense Crowd Spatial-Temporal Structuring Solution
Pretty much large scale facial recognition.

Canon 3D Camera Rig

Polaroid POP

IBM Q System One Quantum Computer

Intel Trailguard AI Anti-Poaching Solution
This is Intel's solution to help with the poaching problem by using AI. The original design had a battery life of 4 to 6 weeks, would provide a lot of false positives, which meant park rangers had more work on top of their already busy schedules. This meant rangers had to constantly change out the batteries, check on the false-positives, and possibly alert poachers to the location of the cameras. By using Intel's AI, it has severely cut down on false positives, and has taken the battery life up to 1.5 years (because the AI automatically discards the false positives before the system does anything with it), and has taken down the size of the unit to make detection even harder. The project is funded by Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation and National Geographic Society.

DJI Gimbals

AI Robot DJ from SK Telecom and SM Entertainment.

LG OLED 8K TV

LG CLOi

Bell Nexus Helicopter
This is suppose to be a future "Uber-like service" but by flying. The idea is space for ground transportation will become limited in the future (as population increases) so there needs to be air travel too.

This is all the photos for today. I hope you have enjoyed the photos! Please don't forget to share the blog post with your friends and family members! Also, if you want to get notifications when I post up more photos, "Like" us on Facebook or follow me on Twitter and Instagram. These links can also be found on the top of the right sidebar.