Talk:Museum of 20th Century IT
Brainstorm
Say something about portability? -Shawn 2010-07-20 1:39PM
We could have a terminal or two set up for Inter Relay Chat. We could let visitors chat on common IRC channels, or make a special channel for the exhibit and invite experienced IRC users to chat with visitors. Shawn 19:33, 29 August 2011 (UTC) Chatters could go on Aminet channel at Amiga World: irc.amigaworld.net #aminet
There could be a station running Eliza, the quasi-therapeutic robot chat. Shawn 19:33, 29 August 2011 (UTC)
Macs could run all sorts of cool programs from http://www.emaculation.com/doku.php/system_6_hell . You can find them in disk image files in our Mini vMac folder. Here's a list of promisingly cool ones:
- 3D-Edit
- 3rd Floor
- Bug Hunt
- Centipede
- Deep Angst
- Enigma
- Ford Simulator II
- Glider
- Inigo Gets Out (requires hypercard)
- Mac Trek
- Missile (1984, truly a golden oldie)
- Rassling (requires hypercard)
- Stunt Copter (Very popular in its day)
We have Puppet Motel, a Laurie Anderson Quicktime adventure on CD, and Invisible Universe, a similar CD package. These would run on any color Mac and provide a multimedia experience.
Play Switched On Bach for the reception.
Shopping List
- Battery for Amiga 2500?
- Parallel printer cable, DB25 to Centronics.
Getting Amiga onto internet
We could use the Mac script we use to serve internet to a TiVo via serial to serve it to an Amiga, then have the Amiga be a modem just like the TiVo. 00:24, 7 September 2011 (UTC)
In-exhibition notes
- During the week, we noticed different things about visitors and the exhibit
When some people come into the exhibit, the first computer they see is the SE/30 at the chat station. It's there to allow people to chat with a user on the iMac behind it, but there usually isn't a second person there. One case where the either the poster should more loudly give instructions, or there should be instructions on the computer itself.
The guest book works, people sign it every day. FileMaker was a boon.
People play games on the Amiga 1200. Yay!
Many visitors can't help but compare these computers to todays, but also many visitors reflect on the historical milieu and the usefulness of these computers back then.
The bright lights and the running computers only compound the poor air conditioning of Sibley, so we should have turned on the room air conditioners earlier.
The lighting is excellent, Beth and Alison did a great job.
The LCD and modern CRT attached to the two Amiga 3000s made them viewable at their high resolution without strain. One historical miscue, but comfort might be more important than authenticity in this case.
The article "Elegance of the PC" in the Cornell Daily Sun, Sep 21 summarizes many visitors' impressions of the exhibit. It brings to the front the conflict between appreciating these machines for what they were when they were and comparing them to today's machines, in terms of function and of design/aesthetics.
Some visitors said they had never heard of Amiga computers, so at least we brought a product that once was used by 5 million people back into light.
19:41, 22 September 2011 (UTC)