In late April of 1968, a computer conference in Atlantic City, N.J., got off to a rocky start. A strike by telephone ...
Wall panel from the 1971 Manfred Mohr solo exhibition "Computer Graphics - Une Esthétique Programmée," various inks on paper, 30.51 x 110.83 (photo by the author) The most commanding visual in Manfred ...
Restoring vintage computers is the favorite task of many hardware hackers. Retrocomputing probably makes you think of home computer brands like Commodore, Amiga, or Apple but [Erik Baigar] is deeply ...
Back in the 1960s, you couldn’t go on the internet to look at porn or play mini-golf. Instead you had to use this thing some once called imagination. This guy had a really nice father back in the day ...
In the 1960s, computer science students didn’t program behind a computer screen. Instead, they wrote their programs on paper and then sent them to be processed by a computer. As a result, said ...
If it was like the 360/40 we had in school, it probably could run assembly, FORTRAN, COBOL, and possibly an early version of something like RPG. Unlike our 40, most 360 (and presumably this RCA) ...
Looking at the photo of the back of the panel, there doesn't look to be any sort of logic there (not surprising) so all the comments about hooking it up to some sort of emulator are somewhat moot.