A Trip Down Computer Memory Lane 118
News.com has an interesting stroll down memory lane with a look at the "DigiBarn", a collection of technology from early mechanical calculators to modern web appliances. NASA contractor Bruce Damer and partner Alan Lundell run this "museum in transition" from a 19th-century farmhouse deep in the Santa Cruz mountains. In addition to notable success milestones, the company also includes some of the industry failures, like an Apple III Damer acquired from Apple's legal department.
wooo (Score:5, Funny)
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Handy link to TFA (Score:4, Informative)
Go on. Read the article. You know you want to. You'll find out why the museum has to be packed up every winter, and learn that Apple had a portable music player as far back as 1979. And more!
Cassette tape? Where are the MP3s??? (Score:1)
Re:Cassette tape? Where are the MP3s??? (Score:4, Insightful)
A few emulators can read from WAV files of the tapes. MP3 should be okay bandwidth-wise, but the psycho-acoustic model throws away information humans can't hear, and I don't know if that is a problem for some data encodings. The WAV-reading only exists to load files from old tapes, it's not a sensible long-term storage mechanism.
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heyhey16k [b3ta.com]
FOR n=0 TO 2
Those were the days
NEXT n
Rich
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There are also methods for transferring files over audio connections between vintage and modern hardware. ADTPro [sourceforge.net] works with the cassette ports in an Apple IIe, II+, or II. I remember reading recently about something with similar capabilities for the TI-99/4A, but I don't recall the name offhand. (Some quick looking-around turned u
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Back in the mid-90s, before mp3s became popular, a small company did a limited run of audio CDs that contained most/all of the games for the Starpath Supercharger [wikipedia.org] Atari 2600 add-on.
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Re:Cassette tape? Where are the MP3s??? (Score:4, Informative)
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I remember not too long ago when hard drive prices were high enough people were dreaming up ways to back up their data to the video
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For some strange reason, lossy compression is something you *really* don't want with program/data files.
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But I'm just jeleaous(sp!)really. I live too far away, I'll never get to make a visit.
Accuracy (Score:5, Informative)
This article is crap.
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They should include that famous Bill Gates quote in the article.
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I'm not a MS lover, I'm a Mac user, but I dislike people bringing that quote up so often.
Regardless it was the design (Score:2)
I remember the hours of pain using 3rd party loaders that could access RAM above 640KB while trying to reduce the number of programs that use the sacred first 640KB of RAM.
Same way I wouldn't care if Jobs said "1 mouse button should be enough for anyone". It's still implied. (hopefully this doesn't start a mouse button tangent, but you get the idea).
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Quote from an interview:
QUESTION: "I read in a newspaper that in l981 you said '640K of memory should be enough for anybody.' What did you mean when you said this?"
ANSWER: "I've said some stupid things and some wrong things, but not that. No one involved in computers would ever say that a certain amount of memory is enough for all time."
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He could be my twin brother, if I had one, as the Vic-20 was the first computer I used and I was programming in BASIC before I could knowingly spell or read (just imitating my father's keystrokes) and what I remember doing the most was printing my n
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One of Kaypro's advantages was a larger screen IIRC. That may have made it look "sleeker".
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I don't think a VIC-20 would even RUN with only 2K of RAM installed (and to get so little, you'd have to take a soldering iron to the main board). They shipped with 5KB RAM with 3583 bytes free for BASIC programs. Some of that would be around 0-page, some of it must be mapped higher for video.
In case you didn't notice (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd be interested to learn more about the "iPod prototype" - described as a Mac in a briefcase - how was the music stored on this? If it were on separate medium such as cassette, disk or somesuch then is it really a prototype of anything? Would it not be a similar, more cumbersome version of the Walkman, which had already appeared by 1980. Since it's a Mac I'd like to say the files were in AIFF format, 'cept WP says that was developed in 1988. What was the state of audio compression at the turn of the eighties? Uncompressed audio seems unrealistic on yesterday's storage media.
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The first was really a demo. I made a BASIC program to fill the screen with the James Bond "007" logo as the tape drive played "View to a Kill" (which I "downloaded" by holding the tape recorder up to the radio speaker). The program loaded, and started drawing to screen, while the sound played through the computer's hardwa
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There was - it was called the PET. While the 4032 and 8032 (and the later SuperPET) used an external (but still proprietary) cassette recorder, the 2001 had it built in, next to the keyboard. Actually, I don't remember exactly if the PET could play audio through the cassette drive, but I do remember that it was a little more reliable than, say, the TRS-80, for loading, as long as the tape alignment was good.
Someone else mentioned the Spectrum...
I never actually used in anger a cassette tape for data storag
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A trip to http://www.old-computers.com/ [old-computers.com] should turn up a lot of them.
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Depending on the time frame, I'd say it was probably pre-MIDI. MIDI was first available on the Yamaha DX7, which was released in 1983. I would guess it was voltage control, as used on many analog synths of the time. Digital audio, as we use it today, would have been a non-starter in a portable system. Even commercial samplers were up in the I-Need-A-Mortgage realm of cost.
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I might be wrong though
80's Compression technology (Score:2)
One slight error (Score:2)
The article says:
I remember needing just a putty knife and a foot-long Torx wrench (the screws that held it together were seated at the top of the machine, but only accessible through deep holes in the bottom)....
not an error (Score:2)
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I have never needed any special tool once the screws are out. You just lay the Mac face down on a pillow or some padding and do a little 'heft' action and it slides open.
It's entirely within the realm of l
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The same T-15 some people used to bullseye Whomp Rats?
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I remember needing just a putty knife and a foot-long Torx wrench (the screws that held it together were seated at the top of the machine, but only accessible through deep holes in the bottom)....
I remember the mac cracker... it was actually a very useful tool for things other than macs. Mine was just a small blunt blade about 1.5 inches in length attached to a plate, attached to a right angle connector which connected to your universal screwdriver. Which I still had it as it would be handy for laptops without screwing up the plastic.
The torx screws in those old macs however were a royal pain... I can't remember exactly what I did but it did involve the use of an allen key with a segment of the
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I'm dissapointed to see... (Score:4, Funny)
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Aw heck - I've got some core laying around here... Great as a conversation piece. Mine comes from my Circa 1972 PDP-11/40, and is laid out in 8KW cards.
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Why no link to the actual museum? (Score:5, Informative)
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But I kept my first computer, a Geniac, for no good reason. Ah, the memories when you turn 0100 (octal).
*Junk = the **stuff you throw away.
**Stuff = the *junk you keep.
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(Thanks for the link -- email sent)
First post........to mention... (Score:3)
OS Wars and Memory Lane. (Score:3, Informative)
Ah the irony, a computer museum filled with old M$ OS. Bill Gates once boasted that he would keep a copy of gnu/linux for his computer museum but would eliminate it otherwise. Yet nothing is more useless than an old copy of Windoze. They can be fun, but they are tied to a particular set of hardware and software that's all rotting away. Emulation is interesting but difficult thanks to all the built in traps. Still, it's nice someone is keeping these things around.
Roughly Drafted has a set of articles detailing the OS wars that would complement the physical collection. If you are looking for a trip down memory lane, here it is:
They are all well written, entertaining and accurate.
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Several problems. You claim that old versions of Windows are useless because they are tied to specific hardware. So, I presume you are anticipating driver issues. How is this Windows's fault any more than the lack of Linux drivers is Linux's fault? I have a Win 95 box (well, laptop) used to play old games. I have an XP box used for newish games, and testing apps I write. I have a Vista box for ubernew games (still waiting on one of those worth
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I have a full retail boxed copy of Windows 1.03, have Windows 2.1, 3.0, 3.1, 3.11, 95, 98, 98SE, ME, NT 3.1, NT 3.51, NT 4.0 and 2000 install media. All of which is generic and can be installed on essentially any x86 hardware with the drives to read it
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OS Machine Specific (Score:2)
In the bad old days, there was a key difference between PC-DOS and MS-DOS. PC-DOS was useless for clone machines if the user wanted to program in BASIC. At the time, IBM was putting the BASIC interpreter on chip, there as a basic.com file that would call up the interpreter. MS-DOS was distributed with BASIC and then later GW-BASIC, and finally QBASIC. I think IBM stopped with the BASIC ROMS when the XT came out.
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MS basic (BASIC-80) used to come in three flavors,
ROM, the minimal level
Extended,which was in ROM
Disk Basic
In the early 16 bits, IBM had extended basic in ROM, and BASICA on floppy extended this to disk basic.
MS-DOS, not being able to rely on having those IBM ROMs (disk basic usually relied on extended basic being in ROM and extending it, rather than replacing it) has GW-BASIC ("Gee-Whiz BASIC"), which was the same thing (but for machine depende
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I've found my old content with the wayback machine, but but godaddy is still holding my code hostage after their billing errors. I also need to convince myself that I really will write at least a couple of columns a week once I get the site up(hmm, a reason to buy another laptop
hawk
M$ Windoze LOLZORZ (Score:2)
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It's the only way I can run 16-bit software, as you can't run 16-bit programs under today's 64-bit OSs. Not that big of a loss really, and I get the authentic feel of running it in Win3.1.
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I come from that era (Score:5, Interesting)
I started out fooling around with these computers, sharing information on CP/M bulletin boards, learning how computers worked from the ground up.
I also remember having the opportunity to meet industry leaders like George Morrow, and work for Takioshi Shiina of SORD computer of Japan. I got to travel, and live in Japan working for SORD.
I remember COMDEX when there were competing operating systems and unique hardware before Microsoft got a strangle hold on innovation and creative thinking.
I remember a time where software patents were unheard of and the thought that ideas for software not the software itself could be owned by some one.
I think of how lucky I have been being able to work on projects where the ideas of creative people not the lawyers and accountants counted the most.
I have been lucky to have grown up in that time.
Thank you Mr Shiina
Cheers
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Any M68 Questions? , email me any time.
Cheers
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If they had software patents back then, imagine how much slower things would have moved. You'd pay a fortune for GUI's and cut-and-paste. But at least we wouldn't be bombarded with Flash ads.
Vic20.. (Score:1)
2K? 2k???!? Its 5K, sir, I will have you know!
http://www.viceteam.org/ [viceteam.org] (VICE VIC20 emulator..)
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I was a packrat. Now I'm a technolgy archivist... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I was a packrat. Now I'm a technolgy archivist. (Score:2)
Mine is actually a cassette recorder. OK, the cassette is about 5 pounds, but . .
[explanation: A WWII or earlier vintage machine, it recorded autdio on spools of wire. The specimen I have uses a cartridge, about three inches tall and deep, 8-12 wide (I'm not going out to check), with spools. I actually have a (broken) second spare cartridge. Some day I'll get the whole thing working.]
hawk, whose collection also includes ancient test meters, memory boards with 210
Open PC BIOS. (Score:3, Informative)
Whilst the OS, CPU, RAM, UARTs, DMAs etc could all be purchased from 3rd parties (Intel, Microsoft, Motorola and friends) they were not open in the OSS sense, the BIOS was proprietory. Compaq then Phoenix had to write clean room BIOS's to make a compatible machine. The same is true of the video BIOS.
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Yes, sort of... The BIOS was proprietary, but IBM did publish the source for it. The reason Phoenix had to clean room it was because it was published they needed to deliberately avoid tainting their efforts. IIRC, what they did was have two teams - one team read the IBM code and wrote descriptions of the routines, and the other team took those descriptions and wrote the code from them. This was how they managed to have such a high level of compatibility without actually copying the IBM code.
Pioneering work in documentation! (Score:1)
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I remember looking through the hard cover (was it purple) ring bound manual in the late 80s.
You want to know how to write to the display, look for the interrupt vector 0x10 and follow the code.
Perhaps the average use couldn't copy it, but hey, why would you want to, you've already got a PC with a BIOS.
Prctically open. (Score:1)
Navigational aid (Score:2)
Back in the day, with the Scalectrix [wikipedia.org] that I had, I had a couple of circular "mechanical computers" that looked alarmingly like that navigational aid from TFA [com.com]. They were speed calculators, from what I remember, but they were simply a circular slide rule, of sorts.
Basic, but functional. Even if the power went off you could work out how fast the cars might go ;)
This 'computer museum' sucks (Score:3, Informative)
Santa Clara computer museum (Score:2)
Videos of the Digibarn (Score:2)
Here are some videos I took of the digibarn last fall. Unfortunatly, my camera malfunctioned when I tried to take more videos during Bruce's most recent tour.
Oh, memory of computers! (Score:2)
Not computer's memories. I thought it was, like, a bunch of guys hanging around and nostalgically reminiscing about when a meg of RAM cost a thousand bucks.
--Rob