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The last gasp of the Electric Typewriter, 1980. The following model, the Wheelwriter, was electronic but still didn't last too long.
Now the Otis College of Art & Design
Architects: Eliot Noyes, with A. Quincy Jones & Frederick Emmons (1964)
IBM cards used by A&P food stores for grocery orders before electronic devises came into use in the stores.
Each card corresponded to a page in an order book with each line an item. The quantity needed was filled in and the completed cards were sent to a processing center which sent the order to the warehouse.
In the north nowhere of Milan... Office, phone, subtle vintage mood... The phantom of modernity is still there...
Original shot taken with a Nikon N70 (F70) 50mm F1,4 Nikkor on Fujifilm 800 asa, almost no post processing, just scanned.
Large, low, yellow brick IBM complex at Don Mills and Eglinton, empty and waiting to be demolished. (Feb 10)
Basel.
Illustrations of famous buildings of Switzerland for IBM. They printed them on curtains for an exhibition
From an old IBM Selectric III typewriter. 1980s - The latest typewriter with ball. 96 charachters - Propably the best typewriter ever made
Las 10 de la mañana. Ostras, llego tarde a trabajar. Anda no, si ya estoy jubilado. Entonces, todo el día a la bartola. Voy a comprar la prensa y me tomo una cervecita por el camino en el bar de la esquina que seguro que allí esta mi ami.....GUANNNN, vete a la plaza y me traes un par de calabacines que voy a hacer una cremita de verduras...y que no se te olvide comprar el pan...y pásate por la tintorería a recoger la chaqueta que te manchaste en la cena del sábado y..........Me voy al inem a ver si hay algo de trabajo para un jubilado con experiencia en informática. IBM
IBM crew on Subway tracks NYC 1984.
SHOOT, PEL (R.I.P.), SEN-ONE, POSE, ECO, POKE, WEST, LONE and NEL-ONE (R.I.P.). REAL GRAFFITI/HIP HOP LEGENDS
IBM 3279-S3G in my living room with an ssh session to a computer running mplayer. The terminal connects via coax to a 3174-21L, then to an 9034 ESCON converter, then to my IBM z890, ssh through the network to my "home theater PC."
Reminds me of the old days when all I had to do my accounts and reports on was an old manual typewriter... seems like the dark ages now!
Thank you to ground*floor for the great texture.
My home computer circa 1983. IBM System 3 with 96 column card punch/reader, dual 40MB disk drives, and wheelbarrow full of manuals. System was installed in the garage. I had parts of it working but couldn't get the big 40MB disk drives running because they required 3-phase power, which would have to come from a supermarket three blocks away at a cost of $10,000 per utility pole.
With a terabit of data storage, the IBM Photostore uses an electron beam to write on small plastic cards. A robot stores boxes of cards on shelves.
Even more interesting – this one was built in 1967.
(More info from CHM)
This is for my Son he requested a picture of a Bee,For Adam and all at IBM Winchester. c u soon mate.
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Formerly the IBM Building, 590 Madison Avenue is a 603 feet (184 m) tall skyscraper at the corner of 57th street in New York City, New York. It was completed in 1983 and has 41 floors. The building cost US$100 million, has 93,592 square metres (1,007,420 sq ft) of floor area, has 24 elevators, and is the 89th tallest building in New York. Edward Larrabee Barnes & Associates designed the building,[4] and IBM developed it. IBM sold the tower to E.J. Minskoff Equities Inc in 1994. As of December 2007, 98% of the building is leased.
The original IBM PC, the first one. It run on Intel 8088 @ 4,77 MHz. Not happy to say that I had one, it was my first pc...
IBM Personal Computer war die Modellbezeichnung des ersten Personal Computers des US-amerikanischen Unternehmens IBM aus dem Jahr 1981. Ebenfalls war es der erste Rechner mit x86-Prozessor des Unternehmens. Wie auch sein Nachfolger, der PC XT basierte er auf dem Intel-8088-Prozessor mit interner 16-Bit-Architektur.