who on here is interested in computer history?
ako
https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,419 Posts
this stuff is so fascinating to me...i dont mean ENIAC and stuff, i mean like, the birth of GUIs and modern computing. for example thinking about the xerox star in the mid-70s, or doug engelbart's 1968 demonstration of copy/paste, hypertext, basic modern computer functions, and the mouse (watch it here and get blown away):http://sloan.stanford.edu/MouseSite/1968Demo.htmlor see the first video of 9 on youtube instead:
its amazing to see how long this stuff has been going on. i also found a website that is currently being run from an Apple Lisa, a thought that was kinda to me.anyway this stuff blows my mind. nobody seems to share this interest with me in the REAL WORLD so i take it to the strut. where my modern-computing history nerds at?
its amazing to see how long this stuff has been going on. i also found a website that is currently being run from an Apple Lisa, a thought that was kinda to me.anyway this stuff blows my mind. nobody seems to share this interest with me in the REAL WORLD so i take it to the strut. where my modern-computing history nerds at?
Comments
- spidey
and especially cause i get super nostalgic when i think about the early to mid 90's when i was a kid and we got our first PC and everything
they had a mouse in 1968? that blew my mind, i thought that was muuuch later...
sounds like we can relate in the same sense, ive spent hours upon hours reading wikipedia articles and the related links. definitely all goes back to the early 90s when we got our first computer (an 8088 before we upgraded to a 486 in '93)
i wish there was an updated version of windows 3.1 that could run XP programs, id totally use that shit on here. program manager for LIFE
makes me miss the 90s like nothing else.
i think we had a 386, then a 486. i'd really like to find a 486 somewhere cause i have so many old games here that i can't get to work with any kind of emulator or dosbox or anything. and i definately remember like, trying to play that version of cannons with two apes throwing bananas at eachother in q-basic, and someone writing "echo off" in dos, and me thinking they destroyed the computer, stuff like that haha
the level of advancement is freaking me out - remember, we had not put a man on the moon yet - NASAs computers could not[/b] do what this guy was doing. so what gives???? its crazy.
im sure you could find one fairly easy at a goodwill or something, for a while old towers and stuff were seriously a dime a dozen. im pretty sure we still have our 486 lying around somewhere, and i know i have both the 8088's i had. ive been collecting vintage computers since then, and have a decent amount of essentials (atari 800, commodore vic-20 and 64, sinclair micro......)
thats strange if you couldnt even get them to run in dosbox, ive gotten some AAAANCIENT software to run in dosbox.
there was a recent article in the Onion...something along the lines of "experts say NASA will have Wireless access by the year 2012" or something, i thought it was pretty funny.
that 1968 demonstration is beyond impressive to me. i think i just like stuff that is ahead of it's time in pretty much every category. for example, as far as cars go, from a year earlier, the 1967 NSU Ro80 was BEYOND ahead of it's time in styling (and mechanics...although the motor was this car's downfall), good luck finding anything even similar till the 80s:
IMG src=http://www.madle.org/ms06ro80.jpg>
insanely ahead of its time. and the funny thing is it seems pretty much everything that is a true ancestor to something commonplace today comes from the late 60s, music, design, computers...im a firm believer that everything that exists today was born in the late 60s, one of the reasons if i ever get a time machine im heading STRAIGHT for 1968....(followed by 1990). its the earliest era where i think i could officially live comfortably.
Sounds like you shoudl talk to this guy:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/oct/11/guardianweeklytechnologysection.news
I had a mouse, an Atari Falcon, some weird modulator system, and a homemade Final Scratch system in 1968, dammit!
According to Mos Def, we still haven't
wow....do you still have the stuff? museums might be interested. haha
Museums WERE interested! Sold off almost all that stuff pretty quickly... Still have a clothbound UNIVAC operating manual.
http://www.computerhistory.org/
I've never been myself, but it's not too far from San Francisco if you're ever in the area.