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
World History 7.01: Assess the degree to which discoveries, innovations, and technologies have accelerated change.
This is the Whirlwind which was an early MIT and US Navy computer. It was completed in 1951 and used over 5000 vacuum tubes. Students should understand the origins of the computer age and be able to analyze the impact that these new technologies have had in our lives. Teachers could contrast a massive machine like this with something like a modern cellphone which has exponentially more power.
From:http://www.computerhistory.org/timeline/images/1943_whirlwind_large.jpg
22nd Internet Identity Workshop, at the amazing Computer History Museum, in downtown Silicon Valley.
This is after the last of three daily meetings following VRM Day 2022b, the second of the two in-person gatherings that ProjectVRM holds each year, always the day before the Internet Identity Workshop (IIW) commences for the next three days at the Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley. This time the workshop also included a talk and discussion led by Roger McNamee as part of the Beyond the Web Salon Series led by Doc and Joyce Searls, who (in addition to their work with ProjectVRM) are visiting scholars at the Ostrom Workshop, of Indiana University, which hosts the series. Roger's talk was carried live by Owl , RingCentral and Zoom to IU and the world. Roger's talk so energized attendees that a cabal, informally called Roger & We, was formed in the room and took more shape over the following days at IIW. Its purpose became branded ESC, for End Surveillance Capitalism.
ProjectVRM was born in 2006 as a project by Doc Searls when he became a fellow with the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard University. Its blog, wiki, and mailing list (of more than 500 members) remain kindly hosted by the BKC.
Akiko Orita 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
A beautiful and extremely ancient teletype. I love the ancient piece of paper still in it. Part of the WISC.
22nd Internet Identity Workshop, at the amazing Computer History Museum, in downtown Silicon Valley.
This is the last of three daily meetings following VRM Day 2022b, the second of the two in-person gatherings that ProjectVRM holds each year, always the day before the Internet Identity Workshop (IIW) commences for the next three days at the Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley. This time the workshop also included a talk and discussion led by Roger McNamee as part of the Beyond the Web Salon Series led by Doc and Joyce Searls, who (in addition to their work with ProjectVRM) are visiting scholars at the Ostrom Workshop, of Indiana University, which hosts the series. Roger's talk was carried live by Owl , RingCentral and Zoom to IU and the world. Roger's talk so energized attendees that a cabal, informally called Roger & We, was formed in the room and took more shape over the following days at IIW. Its purpose became branded ESC, for End Surveillance Capitalism.
ProjectVRM was born in 2006 as a project by Doc Searls when he became a fellow with the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard University. Its blog, wiki, and mailing list (of more than 500 members) remain kindly hosted by the BKC.
Kaliya Hamilin at the 22nd Internet Identity Workshop, at the amazing Computer History Museum, in downtown Silicon Valley.
Andrew Hughes 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
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
Ray Tomlinson, programador da BBN, empresa contratada pelo Departamento de Defesa dos Estados Unidos para implantar a ARPANET, desenvolveu, em 1972, o primeiro sistema capaz de enviar mensagens entre diferentes nós conectados àquela rede. Tomlinson escolheu o símbolo @ que significa "at" (em) para designar a relação usuário@servidor.
Imagem: bp3.blogger.com/_cNfyFaxKESQ/R1BjG_MCjcI/AAAAAAAAAB8/Jnp3...
Fonte: www.computerhistory.org/internet_history/internet_history...
Computer History Museum, Mountain View, California
Nikon D710, Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G
Adobe Lightroom
1/30sec @ f/2.8, iso640, 53mm
Speaker Series: Day of the Dead: Postmortems of Silicon Valley Failures