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  1. Computer Museum of America One of the world's largest collections of artifacts from the digital revolution. +1 (770) 695-0651. ... Timeline of Computer History

  2. computerhistory.org › storiesStories - CHM

    Math Whizzes and Computing Pros. Far from being “hidden figures,” women have been working in computing since the earliest days of the new field. They’ve often faced gender bias and discrimination in their own families, schools, and the workplace when pursuing their interest in mathematics, science, engineering, and technology.

  3. Jul 18, 2010 · Bill Atkinson and Andy Hertzfeld, MacPaint Oral History conducted by Grady Booch, 2004, Computer History Museum; transcript; Hertzfeld, Andy, “Revolution in the Valley”, 2004, O’Reilly; Herzfeld, Andy: The Original Macintosh. Anecdotes about the development of Apple’s original Macintosh computer, and the people who created it ...

  4. Computers Conceived by Harvard physics professor Howard Aiken, and designed and built by IBM, the Harvard Mark 1 is a room-sized, relay-based calculator. The machine had a fifty-foot long camshaft running the length of machine that synchronized the machine’s thousands of component parts and used 3,500 relays.

  5. www.computerhistory.org › revolution › artificial-intelligenceShakey - CHM Revolution

    ShakeyRobots require intelligence to understand sensory input, make plans, and take actions. That makes them ideal for testing many AI concepts.Shakey, developed at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) from 1966 to 1972, was the first mobile robot to reason about its actions.

  6. Jun 3, 2019 · The gift shop doesn't have a lot of tech toys, but they have a large selection computer history books and lots of techy t-shirts that you may like if you can understand tech puns (like Cu Ti π, which are the symbols for the elements copper and titanium followed by the Greek letter pi, but also when pronounced phonetically read "cutie pie").

  7. First called The Computer Museum History Center, it was housed in a storage building near Hangar One at Moffett Field, California. In 2001, it changed its name to the Computer History Museum and acquired its own building in Mountain View, California, in 2002. In 1999, the Computer Museum merged with the Museum of Science, Boston.

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