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Date: | Fri, 22 Aug 2003 20:41:59 -0500 |
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Thank you Elizabeth for the exhibit information. The Intel Museum
in San Jose is also a great place, as is the Tech Museum there.
This made me wonder if maybe such collections do exist privately,
either within corporations or CEOs or others who are in the industry
and helped develop the technologies used today. There are many
computer collections online (see electronetwork.org/exhibits) yet
I've not searched how specialized these may be. I am interested in
the archaeological aspect of today's technologies that rapidly become
obsolete with the next years technology. Maybe they are all in land-
fills, yet I hope someone saves a few of each, as someday I believe
they will be in fine art museums, as moving from pen to keyboard is
a big leap mapped onto many other, related events. Thanks. Brian
bc microsite http://www.electronetwork.org/bc/
~e-list http://www.electronetwork.org/list/
On Friday, August 22, 2003, at 11:29 AM, Elizabeth Walton wrote:
> There is an exhibit in the Smithsonian Museum of American History
> following the evolution of computers with some great artifacts
> (including the first apple computer, the one built in a garage).
>
> Elizabeth Walton
> www.clotheslinejournal.com
>
>
> -------Original Message-------
> From: human being <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: 08/21/03 08:28 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Keyboards in exhibits
>
>>
>> does anyone know if there has ever been an exhibit of
>
> 'keyboards' themselves, as artifacts? such as their changes
>
> from typewriters to computing, a wall of keyboard designs?
>
> thanks for any info. brian
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