Jason,
I agree that those museums are a MUST SEE for any vintage computer
enthusiast!
You forgot to mention (did you miss it?) that they have the origional
"Mark-8 Microcomputer" that Jon Titus built as found on the cover of Radio
Electronics in 1974! It was right next to the micros and micro magazines
exhibit. Jon was a guest at VCF in 1999.
I reckon that the burn-in on the Xerox Alto was an early "desktop theme" or
"screen saver" (did the Alto have that feature?). If I recall correctly it
reminded me of cartoon-like butterflies, flowers, or a bee or something like
that. There were a number of Altos placed into service at the White House
for use by secretaries there, and perhaps one of those is what ended up at
the nearby Smithsonian. I understand that the secretaries that got to use
them, loved 'em.
Its a pity that none of the computers on display at the the museum actually
are working. I think that is a major flaw in their presentation.
I found the videos running as part of the Enigma exhibit and the Eniac
exhibits to be particularly interesting.
John Lewczyk
jlewczyk(a)speakeasy.net
classiccmp digest subscriber
Date: Wed, 30 May 2001 13:57:30 -0400
From: "Jason McBrien" <jbmcb(a)hotmail.com>
Subject: Washington D.C. Trip
Didn't get anything from anywhere on my extended Memorial Day vacation to
Washington D.C. (Mostly running through museums) But I highly reccomend it
to anyone interested in historical computing devices. The main Smithsonian
museums I went to were the American History Museum and the Air and Space
museum. Both had special exhibits on information processing, and among the
highlights are:
*snip*