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Unusually-shaped office tower near to the Beijing Olympic Park.

Työskentelyä IBM-koneiden äärellä laskentakeskuksessa.

 

Aalto-yliopiston arkisto / Aalto University Archives

Image nr: HKK_06_023

 

Tiedätkö lisää tästä kuvasta? Jätä kommentti tai ota yhteyttä sähköpostitse: arkisto@aalto.fi

 

Lisätietoja kuvakokoelmista / more information: libguides.aalto.fi/c.php?g=578570&p=4667669

favorite typewriter to use at home

____

Nikon F100, Cinestill black & white film, self-developed, printed at Portland Community College darkroom

Open House Chicago, Image #32.

 

Mies' last work.

Architect: Vladimir Ossipoff (1962)

1240 Ala Moana Blvd

Honolulu, HI 96814

 

I had a meeting here today so I took a couple of shots of the exterior. This building is threatened, as the current owners have plans to demolish it within the next few years to develop a shopping mall, instead. The city of Honolulu has said they have no interest in providing it with a historical designation or otherwise helping to preserve it unless the owners of the building request it.

 

Sometimes parodied outside the company, the classic IBM “THINK” sign was a feature in many IBM offices from the 1920s to the 1970s. The "THINK" concept, reflecting the company mantra of individual initiative, originated by IBM founder Thomas J. Watson, Sr.

www.computerhistory.org/revolution/punched-cards/2/12/98

Ad Agency: Benton Bowles

designed by Matthew Leibowitz

 

See more IBM Ads here

Slides of the 1965 New York World's Fair by an anonymous photographer found at the Joppatowne Flea Market.

  

The last gasp of the Electric Typewriter, 1980. The following model, the Wheelwriter, was electronic but still didn't last too long.

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.

Now the Otis College of Art & Design

Architects: Eliot Noyes, with A. Quincy Jones & Frederick Emmons (1964)

Large, low, yellow brick IBM complex at Don Mills and Eglinton, empty and waiting to be demolished. (Feb 10)

Enter The Dragon Building: Beijing China’s Pangu Plaza

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.

ATK-keskus. Kauppakorkeakoulun ensimmäinen tietokone IBM otettiin käyttöön 1968.

 

Aalto-yliopiston arkisto / Aalto University Archives

Image nr: HKK_16_042

 

Tiedätkö lisää tästä kuvasta? Jätä kommentti tai ota yhteyttä sähköpostitse: arkisto@aalto.fi

 

Lisätietoja kuvakokoelmista / more information: libguides.aalto.fi/c.php?g=578570&p=4667669

Scenes from an IBM slides presentation, courtesy of Square America. www.squareamerica.com

Evokes Charles & Ray, Op-Art, Good colors.

"The IBM 6400 can handle complicated accounting procedures like billing, inventory, and accounts receivable in a single machine operation. The key to this new simplicity is the IBM 6400 Magnetic Ledger Card. Information important to you is posted on the face of the ledger card. Information important to the IBM 6400 is recorded on a strip of magnetic tape on back of the card. The IBM 6400 reads and cheks all data on the magnetic strip."

1938 Electric Typewriter

music

 

Fomapan 400

Xtol 1+1 (11 min)

cuartonigro fellas

 

: : tumblr : :

 

From an old IBM Selectric III typewriter. 1980s - The latest typewriter with ball. 96 charachters - Propably the best typewriter ever made

Ad Agency: Benton & Bowles

Designed by Matthew Leibowitz

 

See more IBM Ads here

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

 

Ad from Business Week magazine, March 20, 1954

Early 1980s Typewriter, left side.

Last of IBM's electro-mechanical T/Ws.

I was waiting for my first burner to roll out of the 1 tunnel and this came out.I'd been in the lay up with Kase and Mare and these cats were on the next train..needless to stay it took a while to prise my jaw of the floor,lol...respek to the IBM and FC crews....

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

Copyright © 2025 by Craig Paup. All rights reserved.

Any use, printed or digital, in whole or edited, requires my written permission.

 

IBM Fire & Emergency Control -

ESU 97-69

Dutchess County, New York

IBM, Spango Valley - living carpet!

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.

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."

1981 - I guess it was cold that day.

 

IBM Northern Road, Portsmouth. See www.fosterandpartners.com/projects/ibm-pilot-head-office/

 

These 24x80 character 3270s were shared amongst a development and support team (PL/1 and JCL) of about 12 people. Ignore the lighting colour-cast, the machines really were that colour.

I was amazed at the connectivity VAMP gave us. Each of those little cells on the screen was a link to a system somewhere in the world, pre-TCP/IP.

 

These machines had no processing logic - they are just screens (VDUs - visual display units)

 

Hover over the image for additional notes

Vintage Typewriter, 1963

perhaps designed by Matthew Leibowitz?

 

See more IBM Ads here

A Gen Xer doesn't want a computer that asks "What's up, dude?"

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.

South Bank, London SE1.

 

Sony A7II + Sony Zeiss Sonnar T* FE 35mm f/2.8 ZA

Canon EOS 10D (all with 6.3 MP) and a Soviet Helios 44-2 lens

G-IBMS Robinson R.44 Raven II BMS Group @ AeroExpo UK 2018 Booker Airfield 14/06/2018

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