|
The Computer Museum was a Boston, Massachusetts museum that opened in 1979 and operated in two different locations until 1999. It was once referred to as TCM and today is sometimes called the Boston Computer Museum. Gordon and Gwen Bell, with the assistance Digital Equipment Corporation, founded the Digital Computer Museum in a former RCA building in September 1979. The director appointed to lead the museum was Oliver Strimple, who moved from the Science Museum in London. In spring 1982, the Museum received non-profit charitable foundation status from the Internal Revenue Service. In Fall 1983, The Computer Museum, which had dropped "Digital" from its title, decided to relocate to Museum Wharf in downtown Boston, sharing space with the Children's Museum in a renovated wool warehouse. On November 13, 1984, when the Museum officially opened to the public at its new location, the initial exhibits included the Whirlwind vacuum tube computer, the SAGE computer room and the story of Cray computers. Also given prominent display was Gordon Bell's 20-year timeline of major inventions, software developments and benchmark applications. [edit] Vernon Grant
"Mouse Missing" is one card from the Computer Cartoon postcard set created by Vernon Grant for the Museum's gift shop in 1987.
Visitors could sit at computers and ask questions of ELIZA, watch robots or enter the gift shop and purchase cartoonist Vernon Grant's Computer Cartoon postcards. An exhibit on digital imaging was prepared by Geoffrey Dutton of Spatial Effects:
As the Museum began to focus more on activities for children, the exhibits included a two-story walk through a computer, a virtual fish tank and a robot theater. The Museum had, at that time, the single largest collection of robots, many of which were one of a kind. As the interactive exhibits continued to develop, artifact collecting continued in the background. In 1996, the museum established The Computer Museum History Center in Moffett Field, California, which changed its name to the Computer History Museum in 2001. When the Boston Museum closed in 1999, its artifacts and exhibits became part of the collection of Boston's Museum of Science, and in February 2000, the remaining historical artifacts were sent to the Computer Museum History Center.[2] [edit] References[edit] External linksPágina espejo de la Wikipedia Directorio de Enlaces Directorio dmoz Directorio espejo dmoz Pedro Bernardo |