A Personal CyberMuseum:
Documents, Photo Albums, Talks, and Videotapes about Computing History
Gordon Bell Collection of a series of timelines to create an
overall timeline of significant entities and events in Information Processing.
·
Timeline of Computing Artifacts, Inventions, People, and Events --B.C.
to 2007. This timeline consisting of 6 parallel lines is organized around the
principle functions of information processing as they affect use. The main line
is computers for people. Other lines: computers for science and engineering,
record keeping, communications and networking, computers for control, and the
control element (algorithms, architectures, languages). 4/25/2007.
·
Please
review, add, comment, correct and return your feedback to me if you feel up to
the task.
Note on Digital Equipment
Corporation (DEC) artifacts:
- GBell's Cybermuseum
for Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) has artifacts, books,
brochures, clippings, manuals, memos, memorabilia, photos, posters,
presentations, etc. relating to DEC.
- Family Tree of Digital's
Computers Poster created by Gordon Bell in 1980 showing the evolution
of all of all computer models and times they were introduced since 1960.
- Gordon's
Personal View of the Origins of Personal Computing from a
Digital Equipment Corporation perspective. PowerPoint presentation (4 MB,
sans video and audio clips) given at the Vintage Computer Fair, Santa
Clara, CA, 9 September 1998.
- Gordon Bell
Interview by David Allison, head of the Computing Collection at the
Smithsonian, in the Summer of 1995, with updates
and corrections in June 2000. This material covers a period of the
author's life that goes beyond Digital.
Documents of historical interest
that have been scanned
- Hollerith's Original Patent
Application, January 1889.
- Computer
Generations Booklet created by Gordon Bell in 1975 to accompany a
display of computing artifacts in the lobby of Building 12, Digital's
headquarters.
- Family Tree of Digital's
Computers Poster created by Gordon Bell in 1980 showing the evolution of
all of all computer models and times they were introduced since 1960.
- Computer
Museum Poster of Pre-computing Generations created by Gordon Bell in
1980 showing a progression of various computing devices and technologies.
- Computer Museum
Memories Poster showing various memory and storage devices.
- Computer
Museum "Building Blocks of AI" Poster of a quilt created by
Penny Nii that has the "fathers of AI"..
- Ardent
Price
versus Performance of Supercomputers Poster in 1988.
- Ardent
"Foundations
of Supercomputing" Timeline Poster giving the timeline of computer
classes and technologies till 1988.
- Microprocessor
Poster, 25 years of Microprocessor evolution. 2.17 MB jpg.
- CDC 8600 Manual, preliminary 8600 reference
manual, Control Data Corporation.
- CDC 8600 Patent No. 3833889, dated
September 3, 1974.
- Adams Associates Computer Characteristics
Quarterly, dated 1967, scanned and contributed by Ed Thelen. This quarterly contains summaries for all
commercial computers at the time.
- IBM Reference Manual for the IBM
224 Card Punch and IBM 26 Printing Card Punch, dated October 1965, scanned
and contributed by Ed Thelen.
- Ethernet Blue Book, 5MB PDF file of
Ethernet specifications from September, 1980.
- Ethernet Blue Book, Ethernet
specifications in TIF format.
- Ethernet Seminar, Ethernet Press Seminar
held at the World Trade Center on February 10, 1982, in TIF format.
- The complete Ethernet
Announcement by Bell (Digital), Noyce (Intel),
and Liddle (Xerox) slides and script (PDF
7MB) was made in New York City on February 10, 1982 by the DIX group,
followed by announcements in Amsterdam, and London. Note Gordon's presentation states: "the network becomes the
system"... Can you recall a
similar mantra that SUN Microsystems later appropriated?
Digital Equipment Corporation Books
- Bell, C. G., C. Mudge, J. McNamara, COMPUTER ENGINEERING, Digital
Press 1978. At this site.
- Bell, Grason,
Newell, DESIGNING
COMPUTERS AND DIGITAL SYSTEMS USING PDP-16 REGISTER TRANSFER MODULES,
Digital Press, September 1972. At this
site.
Papers
- The Revolution Yet to Happen, ACM2047.doc
(300K
or about 7K words) is an invited book chapter commemorating the 50th
anniversary of the Association for Computing Machinery by Jim Gray and I.
We posit the next platforms, interfaces and networks as a framework for
new kinds of computers e.g. Do What I Say, Body Area Nets, and Guardian
Angels.
- The next 50 years: More Change Than
Anyone Can Imagine is a paper that speculates about future micros. It
was published in the Microprocessor Report, August 1996 or it can be read Future
Micros.doc (150K) .
- CyberAll has
stimulated interest in a CyberMuseum, as a part
of The Computer Museum History
Center located at Moffett Field, Mountain View, CA. (see also extended
bio regarding the museum).
- My thoughts on the merits of a Cyberspace versus a Meatspace (Physical) Computer history Museum were
written in the Spring of 2002 as a Trustee for
the Computer history Museum using a multi-dimensional framework that
allows trustees, members, supporters, and others to understand their own
priorities in regard to the construction of such a museum.
Fundamentally, it comes down to the cost to maintain a meatspace
presence (building and exhibits) to attract large crowds and financial
support versus a more modest place that will preserve and present
artifacts to a worldwide audience using WWW, with minimal ability to
exhibit and explain artifacts.
PowerPoint Albums and Talks of
Computing History
- Laws that Govern the Computer Industry and
Computer Class formation. PowerPoint Presentation sans script. This is a
working outline of a book that Jim Gray and I have talked about writing by
perhaps 2001. We have collected a score of Laws (e.g. Moore's, Metcalfes's, Bill's, Nathan's) that describe the
computer industry and market.
- Internet 1, 2,
& 3. Past, present, and future. Talk and PowerPoint with scripts,
given April '95 InternetWorld html Talk
with script
or PowerPoint Internet.ppt (250K). This talk gives
some comments on the evolution starting with ARPAnet.
- Supercomputing
(t): A Photo Chronology A PowerPoint album (7.2 MB) with
various supercomputer photos and specifications, chronicling the evolution
of computing starting before the computer and continuing to 2000. Click to view the talk in
your browser.
- Predicting Future Telecom Services and
Lack Thereof Bellcore Conference (Competing in
the Millennium) 5 May 1998
- PowerPoint Presentation sans script
Talk with Bob Lucky about the future challenges for all telecom carriers
e.g. LECs, CLECs, IECs, IXCs. This includes why
phone guys hate computers guys, why computer guys hate phone guys, and why
no one likes cable guys.
- Six Challenges for Future Computing. PowerPoint
Presentation sans script. Presented at the New Paradigms for Using
Computers aka New Uses for the PC Workshop at IBM Research, Almaden, CA, on 16 July 1998. Also, given to INRIA
October 1998
- Manchester University 50th Anniversary Keynote PowerPoint
Presentation sans script. This conference celebrated the 50th anniversary,
21 June 1948, of the first stored program operation at Manchester University on their
"Baby" computer. My talk recalls the various contributions to
computing at Manchester, including the discovery of virtual memory, memory
hierarchies, and the one-level store.
- Gordon's
Personal View of the Origins of Personal Computing from a
Digital Equipment Corporation perspecive.
PowerPoint presentation (4 MB, sans video and audio clips) given at the
Vintage Computer Fair, Santa Clara, CA, 9 September 1998.
Gordon Bell Perspectives and Memoirs
on Significant Computer Pioneers
Netshow Videos and Videotapes
- A short (5 min.) video on the Life of
Seymour Cray is provided by Cray Research/SGI at 28.8Kbps and 300Kbps.
- Computer Pioneers (Atanasoff,
Grosch, Hopper, Stibitz and Zuse)
and Pioneer Computers Videotapes (ENIAC to EDVAC, with Burks, Eckert, Mauchly, and Wilkes) are two 50 minute videotapes
using original film and video that The ACM, The Computer Museum, and Gwen
Bell and I produced. They are available from the ACM
and
The Computer Museum.
- The Laws of Prediction. Netshow Talk given at the ACM97 Conference, San Jose,
CA, March 3-5, 1997. All of the ACM97 Talks are at http://www.research.microsoft.com/acm97.
- On the Future
of Computers.
Netshow Video @28.8 Kbps. This 1972 videotaped
lecture was given at M.I.T. and describes a model for future computers,
including computer classes and the prediction of new types of computers.
Gordon Bell Biographical Material
including Interviews, etc.
Gwen and Gordon Bell Artifacts
Collection
- Computing
Artifacts. Over 300 computing artifacts collected by Gwen and Gordon
Bell.
- Book Collection.
Collection of rare and historical books collected by Gwen and Gordon Bell.
Books
These
books were encoded at Carnegie-Mellon University and hosted at their Universal
Library http://www.ulib.org/ . With the
exception of High Tech Ventures, the books are out of print and
unavailable.
- Bell C. G., A. Newell, COMPUTER
STRUCTURES: READINGS AND EXAMPLES, McGraw-Hill, 1971. At this site.
- Bell, Grason,
Newell, DESIGNING
COMPUTERS AND DIGITAL SYSTEMS USING PDP-16 REGISTER TRANSFER MODULES,
Digital Press, September 1972. At this
site.
- Bell, C. G., C. Mudge, J. McNamara, COMPUTER ENGINEERING, Digital
Press 1978. At this site.
- Siewiorek, D., C. G. Bell, A. Newell, COMPUTER
STRUCTURES: PRINCIPLES AND EXAMPLES, McGraw-Hill, 1982.
- Bell, C. Gordon, John E. McNamara, HIGH TECH VENTURES: THE GUIDE TO
ENTREPRENEURIAL SUCCESS, Addison-Wesley, 1991. At this site.
This book is available in hard copy from Addison-Wesley. It is put
here for viewing and not for downloading and printing to circumvent the
purchase of a book. Hard copies should be purchased from the
publisher.
<hr
size=2 width="100%" align=center>
msr home
| search | Microsoft