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Many important objects from the Computer History Collection are on exhibition in Information Age: People, Information and Technology, a 14,000 square foot display on the first floor of the National Museum of American History. Opened in May 1990, the exhibition surveys the history of information technology and its relation to society from the origin of the telegraph to the present. The display has over 900 original artifacts. They include Samuel Morse's telegraphs, Alexander Bell's telephones, a Hollerith punched card machine, a 4-rotor German ENIGMA encoder used during World War II, the ENIAC computer, the TELESTAR test satellite, an automotive welding robot, a selection of early personal computers, and digital high definition television. With 50 interactive computer and video display, Information Age is also the Smithsonian's most interactive exhibition.Theme Information Age centers on the technical evolution of electrical and electronic information technology. The telegraph began a revolution in communications by transmitting information in electrical form instantly to distant locations. This new phenomenon of instant information was later expanded by the telephone, radio and television. Then the digital electronic computer made it possible to process information instantly. As the computer developed and matured, communication and processing technologies were joined into networks that now stretch around the world, affecting all areas of global society. Although the exhibition is built around this technical theme, its emphasis is as much on social as technical change. The transformations in information technology came in a context of social forces such as business, politics, wars, and consumer interests. The exhibition highlights the interaction between these social forces and the development of information technology.
Computer Collections Sample
The Computer History Collection includes artifacts relating to the production, collection, modification, manipulation, and use of information in modern American society. The collection comprises artifacts employed in the processing of information as opposed to its simple communication. By processing, we mean operations of objects that involve the following functions:
Data processing objects in the computer collections are all electronic, as earlier processing equipment is in the mathematics collections or other collections in the museum. Because information technology is ubiquitous, other units of the museum also rightly collect artifacts of information technology related to specific processing tasks (e.g. robotic machine tools, typewriters, printing presses, and photographic equipment). Approximate numbers of objects in the collection:
Reference MaterialsThe Computer History Collection includes a wide variety of reference materials related to the objects in its collections. Access to these materials generally requires making a research appointment with the Division. Over time, selected materials being digitized and made available to the public on-line. A few are available below. In addition to holdings in the Division, reference materials on the history of computing are available in the American History Archives Center.
Although the development of modern communications and computers is among the most important aspects of modern American history, historical writing about the development is remarkably sparse. And few of the leaders of the development have written their own memoirs. The Smithsonian Institution is capturing the recollections of some of these people in the form of oral and video histories. In this area, you will find transcripts of some of the Smithsonian's images. Copyrights of the interviews belong to the Smithsonian Institution. They may be cited or quoted briefly, but not reproduced or published in any form.
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