View allAll Photos Tagged computerhistory
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
In this 1999 photo, Netscape employees work and play around a replica of the Golden Gate Bridge made from soda cans. –Ed Kashi, CORBIS
Computer History Museum
Mountain View, CA
(6927)
From computerhistory.org/blog/quicktime-and-the-rise-of-multim...:
“During our CHM Live talk, Bruce Leak, Peter Hoddie, and Doug Camplejohn explained how various strands of work within Apple converged to become QuickTime, beginning with Apple’s Advanced Technology Group (ATG). At the time, ATG was experimenting with animation and produced a 3-D video, wholly rendered on a Macintosh, called Pencil Test. The video, released in 1988, portrayed the adventures of a pencil tool in MacPaint that escapes the Mac’s screen to interact with real world objects. (If this sounds similar to the plots of early Pixar short films, it’s not a coincidence. Pixar’s Andrew Stanton (Toy Story, Finding Nemo, Wall-E) illustrated and helped write the film, and John Lasseter was an advisor.) Pencil Test was a key milestone in ATG research that would feed into QuickTime, as Bruce Leak, Jim Batson, Steve Perlman, and others, who would later work on QuickTime, all worked on the Pencil Test.“
Originally included on the CD “QuickTime: The Beta Release” from Apple Computer, Inc. Converted from QuickTime file format to AVI, while preserving the original video data (the audio data has been converted from signed to unsigned).
Copyright © 1988,1991 Apple Computer, Inc.
Jason Richer at the 22nd Internet Identity Workshop, at the amazing Computer History Museum, in downtown Silicon Valley.
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
22nd Internet Identity Workshop, at the amazing Computer History Museum, in downtown Silicon Valley.
Homebrew Computer Club newsletter
The legendary Homebrew Computer Club provided a meeting place for computer hobbyists, many of whom later became pioneers in the microcomputer industry in Silicon Valley. At its first meeting in March 1975, held in a Menlo Park, California, garage, this group gathered to discuss the Altair 8800, an early build-it-yourself computer kit, and other technical topics. It was personal computers and set out to build, with Steve Jobs, the Apple I. Wozniak said he designed the Apple I as “a way of showing off to my friends” at the Homebrew Computer Club. The club disbanded in 1986 but celebrated its 25th anniversary at a reunion in March 2001.
Computer History Museum
Mountain View, CA
(6892)
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Computer History Museum in Mountain View California
1401 N Shoreline Blvd
Mountain View, CA
(650) 810-1010
The world's largest history museum for the preservation and presentation of artifacts and stories of the Information Age located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Picture Taken by Michael Kappel (Me)
View the high resolution Image on my photography website
Follow Me on my Tumblr.com Photo Blog
Analog Computers
“Today, computers use “1”s and “0”s to encode numbers. However, numbers can also be represented directly through physical quantities such as electrical voltages or currents, volumes of liquid, or the position of mechanical shafts. Although limited in accuracy, analog computers are very useful for certain types of applications. Prior to the early 1960s, it was not possible to saw whether analog or digital technology would prevail. Mechanical analog machines were designed by Lord Kalvin at the end of the 19th century and reached a peak with the Differential Analyzers built by Vannevar Bush in the 1930s. Descendents of these giant mechanical devices were in regular use until the early 1980s. Electrical analog computers are still used for some special applications.”
Computer History Museum
Mountain View, CA
(7182)
Exhibit at the Computer Museum when it was in Boston, MA
Taken around 1990 with a Vivitar PS:20 using Ektachrome 100 slide film. Scanned on a Canon MP990 using auto scan (1200 dpi). No edits other than flipping. The scan software is silly. It does not have you place the emulsion side toward the glass. It also crashes a lot in manual mode.