Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Postcard from Silicon Valley

There is always at least one surprise when I take one of my trips. On this last adventure, one of the big surprises was finding the The Computer History Museum in Mountain View. Of course, it makes perfect sense that such a museum would exist in the heart of Silicon Valley, but that fact does not make the surprise any less fun.

Located in a new, modern building next to Moffat Field Air Base, the museum was obviously built with a plan in mind. By that, I mean the layout of the museum was carefully created as a walk through history. After watching a short introductory film, you follow a winding path through various rooms beginning with the earliest form of computers. As you follow the arrows on the floor, you move forward in time, eventually coming to today…and the future. As the sign says when you enter, this museum celebrates the first 2,000 years of computing.

In the first room, you find the earliest tools used for computing including the abacus. There is a short film there showing how to use one (I still don’t get it). In every room there are TV’s showing films about the various computing devices on display.

In the room that shows artifacts from World War II, there is an authentic German Enigma machine. This machine encoded messages from the German High Command to commanders in the field. The Germans thought the codes unbreakable, but the Allies broke the codes early in the war.

In other rooms you see the giant IBM 360 machines, the first optical drive, the first Cray Supercomputer and more…far too much to describe here. As you move forward in time, one eventually comes upon the first personal computers, which is where I stepped into the computing world. They had almost all of the earliest personal computers there, from the Apple 1 to the PET, the TSR, Commodore 64 and many more.

From here on was familiar territory as each room showed hardware and software from the 80’s until now. There was a room set aside for hand held devices (including phones), the history of games (Pong, anyone?), software, and later, the history of networking and the Internet. The last room is set aside for a film about the future, featuring some of the giants of the industry and their predictions.

The photo here is a semi-arch formed by replicas of software boxes. I thought it made a good photograph and was representative of the museum. Obviously it was from the Software section of the museum.

Besides the museum, I saw several home offices of some the major technology companies headquartered in Silicon Valley…including Apple, Yahoo, IBM, Cisco, Oracle and many others. I also got to see the new 49er football stadium under construction in the heart of Silicon Valley. It was quite a journey. 

(To see a larger version of this photo, just click on the image)

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