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Was haben Roland Kaiser, Udo Jürgens und die Flippers mit der heutigen Plattcast zu tun? Findet es heraus! Wir haben uns ins Schützenfestgetummel begeben und ordentlich gefeiert. Auch wenn wir nicht mehr Pabst sind, so haben wir doch mit Leo einen Neuen. Und auch der Friedrich hat es geschafft und darf sich ab sofort German Kanzler nennen. Darauf erheben wir unsere Hopfenkaltschorlen und wünschen der Welt mit diesen beiden Neuligen gutes Gelingen. Unsere drei Neulinge in der heutigen Sendung: das Pilsener aus dem Hause Pott`s, das Hoppy Pilsener der Ratsherrn Brauerei von der Schanze in Hamburg sowie das Kreuzwertheimer Hell aus Bayern. Ralf hat übrigens das Computermuseum in Oldenburg besucht, welches wir an dieser Stelle gerne empfehlen wollen! Heute mal wieder an Bord, drei spannende Entweder-Oder-Fragen. Auch die platte Frage ist heute wieder am Start! Der Mai zeigt sich von seiner schönsten Seite - dieser Plattcast tut es dem Monat gleich! Zelebriert den Hörgenuss. Hol`t jau fuchtig!
Am 9. April ist der 100. Geburtstag des nordrhein-westfälischen Computerpioniers Heinz Nixdorf. Während er von Paderborn aus mit elektronischer Datenverarbeitung die globale Industrie eroberte, haben Computer auch Kunst und Kultur nachhaltig verändert. Von Peter Grabowski.
Hearing of the Living Computer Museum, Illegally Parking, Artifacts and Items, The Paul Allen Story (Short Version), A Conversation with Stephen Jones, The Grand Plan, Delchi's Consoles, The MADE, Cryosleep, Highest Bidders, The Billions, A Part of History, The Lessons Learned The Living Computer Museum is not returning and its contents will be auctioned. At least, the big ticket items. I'm not happy about this and neither is anyone else, but here we are. At least there's some glimmers in the darkness. Following my general credo of "Always Take Pictures", here's two Flickr galleries of Living Computers I took over some of my visits: https://www.flickr.com/photos/textfiles/albums/72157635312051527 https://www.flickr.com/photos/textfiles/albums/72157700864034805
Jazz musician Will Scruggs details his plans to open the Phoenix City Jazz Club in Decatur. Plus, we'll hear about the Computer Museum of America. The museum is in Roswell, Georgia, and executive director Rena Youngblood joined us to discuss their Apollo 11 exhibition.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Lords: * Elena * Nathalie * https://alienmelon.itch.io/ [cw:flashing lights] Topics: * Fish-based screensavers * Fire safety * The Aquarium and the Glass Harmonica * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOx7zmO5ppw * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2FAc3HmfoSY * I Am Running Into A New Year by Lucille Clifton * https://nextworldover.tumblr.com/post/738271770264600576 * I went to Japan * https://nerdparadise.com/mspaint/stereogram Microtopics: * Shikiori Ink. * The Computer Museum in Berlin. * Back when you saw fish-based screen savers everywhere. * The Roku app fish screen saver. * A rock in the aquarium that says "Roku" * 11 hours of fish content. * Fish nerds sitting in a small box at the bottom of the ocean getting hype over seeing a small worm. * An animated gif of fish nerds getting hype. * A live jellyfish web cam that is just in principle. * A web cam of the thing that goes donk and everyone cheers when it goes donk. * The fish screen saver where you need to keep buying floppy disks with fish food on it or the fish die. * Don't copy that fish food! * The startup selling digital rabbit food going out of business so all the digital rabbits go into hibernation. * The Life Cycle of Software Objects. * Being unable to open your front door because the smart lock ran out of batteries. * Everybody congratulating you on the infuriating guy you made up to get mad at. * Fire safety anecdotes. * Glass top electric stoves that look just like induction stoves, as a prank. * How fire extinguishers taste. * Looking at fire extinguisher dust and thinking "let's get the blood brain barrier involved." * Leaving the stove on. * Broiling a sandwich and the whole sandwich catches fire. * A five year old doing science experiments with a lit candle. * The UX design of grease fires. * The William Shatner song about the dangers of deep frying a turkey. * Relating to the teens coming into fashion for like a week and then the next week the teens are like "You're still trying to relate? That's cheugy AF." * Self-moistening fingertips. * Soaking your fingertips in water for eight minutes to get them pruny. * The Canon of harmonica virtuoso music. * Ethereal floating tones that fade in and out of existence. * The Flat Bells. * The Mellotron as a slightly more physical sampler. * Clara Rockmore playing "The Swan" on Theremin. * Bit-doers playing "The Swan" on Otamatone. * Letting go of what you said to yourself about yourself when you were 16, 26, even 36. * The assumption that you need to be forgiven for something. * The sun coming up on this episode of Topic Lords. * Working up the courage to climb the mountain you see every day from your back yard. * Really tall hills you can walk up. * What it's like to not hear cars constantly. * Designing a building to sound good – even if it isn't a concert hall. * Car-free cities. * Biking in a bike-centric environment. * Throwing your body into traffic and hoping drivers care about the legal liability of running someone over. * The intersection where you always see the skid marks from kids doing donuts. * Doing watercolors but with ink. * Buying a bunch of art supplies and never using them because you're afraid to waste them. * How do you get your paintbrush to do what you want? * How watercolors behave depending on how wet the painting is and how wet the paintbrush is. * Scraping your knife on the painting and it just looks like a shed. * Is it a bunch of cats or is it the word "gay"? * Images that look like stereograms but aren't. * The blank canvas stereogram. * Crowds staring at the enormous stereograms hanging up in the Mall of America. * Stereogram artists accounting for pupillary distance. * Making a stereogram in MS Paint.
Diesmal ist Gordon selbst auch einfach Zuhörer, denn ich hatte das Glück mit Dr. Stefan Stein sprechen zu können. Stefan ist Kurator im Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum (HNF), dem weltgrößten Computer-Museum in Paderborn. Und er ist dort u. a. für den Ausstellungsbereich der Kryptologie verantwortlich. All das, was wir heute unter einer sicheren Verbindung, z. B. ins Büronetz aus dem Home-Office heraus oder beim Besuch einer Webseite verstehen, hat ja seinen Ursprung. Das Thema Kryptologie ist nicht einfach vom Himmel gefallen, sondern aus dem Bedarf entstanden, Botschaften vor anderen Augen zu verbergen - und das schon seit der Antike. In unserem Gespräch gehen wir durch die Ausstellung und picken uns verschiedene Exponate heraus, an denen wir die noch heute gültigen Gegebenheiten diskutieren. Dabei darf die Skytale aus der Antike genauso wenig fehlen, wie die Enigma aus dem 2. Weltkrieg. Gordon und ich wünschen viel Spaß beim Zuhören und Abtauchen in die Geschichte der Verschlüsselung!Shownotes Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum (HNF) DD Folge #003 - Verschlüsselte Kommunikation (Podcast) DD Folge #056 - Verschlüsselte Kommunikation (Podcast) Sherlock Holmes - Die Tanzenden Männchen (Projekt Gutenberg) Die Kryptographie (Wikipedia) Die Kryptoanalyse (Wikipedia) Die Caesar-Verschlüsselung (Wikipedia) Charles Babbage (Wikipedia) Alan Turing (Wikipedia) Die Skytale (Wikipedia) Die symmetrische Verschlüsselung (Wikipedia) Die Steganographie (Wikipedia) Die Jefferson-Walze (Wikipedia) Die Kreuzpeilung (Wikipedia) Arthur Scherbius (Wikipedia) Die Enigma (Wikipedia) Bletchley Park (Wikipedia) Der Roman "Enigma" (Wikipedia) Der Film "Enigma" (IMDb) The Imitation Game (IMDb) Charta der Grundrechte der Europäischen Union (Wikipedia) Wissenschaftlicher Dienst des Europäischen Parlaments (EPRS)(Wikipedia) App: Clonezilla (Linux) (Projekt)(Wikipedia) App: Bebop (iOS) (App Store) App: Citizens-App (iOS/Android) (Hersteller)
Welcome to an exciting episode of GoGaddis Real Estate Radio! I'm Cleve Gaddis, your host, and today we have something truly special for you. We're diving into the world of technology and innovation with our special guests, Rena Youngblood, Executive Director of the Computer Museum of America, and her husband, Steve. Segment Teaser: Here's a glimpse of what's in store: Something You Should Know about Greater Atlanta: Ever wondered about the fascinating world of computing and technology? We're taking you on a journey to discover the Computer Museum of America, a hidden gem in Greater Atlanta that's dedicated to preserving the history of computing. Meet Rena and Steve: Our special guests, Rena and Steve, share their insights into how the Computer Museum of America came into being and their mission to educate and inspire visitors through the world of technology. Exploring the Museum: Get ready to explore the exciting exhibits that await you when you visit the museum. Rena will give us a sneak peek into some of the most intriguing displays that showcase the evolution of computing. Summer Camps and Events: Discover the museum's engaging summer camps and special events lined up for 2024. It's not just a museum; it's an interactive hub for tech enthusiasts of all ages. Host Your Event: Learn about the unique opportunity to host your party or event at the Computer Museum of America. It's a fantastic setting for celebrations and gatherings. Volunteer Opportunities: Like many museums, the Computer Museum of America thrives on the support of dedicated volunteers. Rena and Steve will share how you can get involved and contribute to their mission. Opening Hours and More: Find out when you can visit and how to learn more about this incredible institution. Plus, Rena and Steve will direct you to their website for additional resources. The Computer Museum of America isn't just a museum; it's a journey through the technological marvels that have shaped our world. Join us in exploring the history and future of computing and technology. To access additional stories and podcasts featuring the Computer Museum of America, check out their website under 'About' and explore 'In The Press.' Don't miss this captivating episode that brings technology and history to life. Make sure to subscribe to our podcast for more insightful interviews and engaging topics. Join us for a captivating conversation that will broaden your horizons and spark your curiosity about the ever-evolving world of technology. This is an episode you won't want to miss! Host of GoGaddis Radio, Cleve Gaddis, has been a fixture in metro Atlanta real estate since 2000. He has served Atlanta since 1987 by helping thousands of buyers and sellers make smart decisions. As a Co-Team Leader of Modern Traditions Realty Group, he is able to help clients and real estate agents alike. He has the heart of a teacher and is passionate about helping listeners learn the ups and downs and the ins and outs of smart home buying and selling all throughout metro Atlanta. If you have a question for Cleve, click here : https://gogaddisradio.com/ask-a-question If you are looking to buy or sell your home with Cleve, click here : https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/contact If you are looking to join a real estate team, click here : https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/career-opportunity If you bought a home last year, don't forget to file your Homestead Exemption! https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/homestead-exemption
Welcome back to another informative episode of GoGaddis Real Estate Radio! I'm your host, Cleve Gaddis, and today we're delving into a fascinating topic that's changing the landscape of real estate: Ring Doorbells and In-Home Cameras. Segment Teaser: Here's a sneak peek of what we'll be discussing: The Impact of Technology: Technology is transforming the way we experience real estate, and Ring Doorbells and In-Home Cameras are at the forefront of this change. We'll explore how these devices are influencing the buying and selling process. Exploring the Computer Museum of America: We'll briefly revisit our previous episode featuring the Computer Museum of America, an institution dedicated to the history of computing. If you missed it, be sure to check it out! Ring Doorbells and Real Estate: Dive into the world of Ring Doorbells and In-Home Cameras and their growing significance in the real estate market. Learn how these devices offer enhanced security and convenience for both buyers and sellers. Privacy and Ethics: As these technologies become more integrated into the real estate industry, questions of privacy and ethics arise. We'll discuss the importance of responsible usage and respecting boundaries. Practical Applications: Discover practical applications of Ring Doorbells and In-Home Cameras in real estate transactions. From virtual tours to enhanced security during showings, these tools are changing the game. Consumer Perspectives: We'll share insights into how consumers are responding to the presence of these devices in homes. Are buyers and sellers embracing this technological shift? Best Practices: Get tips on how to effectively use Ring Doorbells and In-Home Cameras when buying or selling a home. We'll discuss best practices to ensure a smooth and secure experience. Future Implications: What does the future hold for real estate and technology? We'll explore potential advancements and trends to watch out for. Technology is reshaping the real estate industry, and Ring Doorbells and In-Home Cameras are at the forefront of this revolution. Whether you're a tech enthusiast or just curious about the changing landscape of real estate, this episode is a must-listen. Join us for an engaging discussion that sheds light on the powerful impact of technology on the way we buy and sell homes. Don't forget to subscribe to our podcast for more insightful conversations and expert advice. Get ready to uncover the exciting possibilities and considerations surrounding Ring Doorbells and In-Home Cameras in the world of real estate. This is an episode you won't want to miss! Host of GoGaddis Radio, Cleve Gaddis, has been a fixture in metro Atlanta real estate since 2000. He has served Atlanta since 1987 by helping thousands of buyers and sellers make smart decisions. As a Co-Team Leader of Modern Traditions Realty Group, he is able to help clients and real estate agents alike. He has the heart of a teacher and is passionate about helping listeners learn the ups and downs and the ins and outs of smart home buying and selling all throughout metro Atlanta. If you have a question for Cleve, click here : https://gogaddisradio.com/ask-a-question If you are looking to buy or sell your home with Cleve, click here : https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/contact If you are looking to join a real estate team, click here : https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/career-opportunity If you bought a home last year, don't forget to file your Homestead Exemption! https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/homestead-exemption
Thank you to Michael, a volunteer at the Computer Museum of America , for taking a few minutes to share what he loves about it Video Recorded 11/4/2023 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gdliberals/message
James and John discuss eBay finds: JLPGA PowerBook, Macintosh Classic II, and Macintosh II. Joe from Joe's Computer Museum repairs John's problem SE/30 logic boards, ands news includes iMac inspired iPhone cases, OpenEmulator, and an Apple themed Geo Metro. Join our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter, watch us on YouTube, and visit us at RetroMacCast.
Im Gespräch mit Dr. Jochen Viehoff, dem Direktor des Computermuseums beleuchten wir die Geschichte von Nixdorf und erfahren, was das Museumsforum abseits von Computern noch zu bieten hat.
John and guest Joe from Joe's Computer Museum discuss eBay finds: Mac Portable bag, 1984 Mac handbook, Powerbook 1400c, and 2013 Mac Pro. Joe talks about the new BlueSCSI v2, and news includes VCF SE 2023. Join our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter, watch us on YouTube, and visit us at RetroMacCast.
Listen to Adrian Frenulovich talk about the joys and challengers of curating ancient computers, and their importance to our history. News of the energy breakthrough that wasn't. Hosted and produced by Ian Woolf Support Diffusion by making a contribution Support Diffusion by buying through affiliate links
Listen to Adrian Franulovich talk about the history of Australian computing and the 40th anniversary of the Apple Lisa computer, at the Australian Computer Museum Society. News of good vibrations reversing aging. Hosted and produced by Ian Woolf Support Diffusion by making a contribution Support Diffusion by buying through affiliate links
Justin and Scott hold down this episode talking about a wide variety of topics including Beverly Hills, Magic, Peacemaker, and The Ventures. 00:17 – Robo Brogan kicks off the podcast, Scott talks about Beverly Hills Nevada, and they talk about the peaks of Covid and it being on the downturn. They God bless their wives, discuss the idea of doing a GCP wives podcast, and Scott expresses his love for the F-You Clyde. Justin reflects on playing Magic back in the day with Brogan, how he expresses his frustration at video games, and having friends over to their house to enjoy food from Southern Kitchen. 21:10 – Justin shares his love of Hush Puppies, Scott talks about getting into Magic as a kid, and Justin talks about Scott being a closet nerd. Scott talks about volunteering for NorwesCon, what drove him to do the podcast in Tacoma, and Justin talks about the deal the Tacoma Performing Arts Center had with Tacoma. Justin jumps into Scott Topics, Scott talks about the giant snake on Reddit, and shares the story of a farmer putting VR headsets on his cows to help with lowering the cows stress level. 40:01 – Justin expresses his love of the cyber punk future, they discuss the reality of having to worry about loosing electricity, and the impact that would have on people. Scott talks about his excitement for self-driving cars, Justin talks about what the Computer Museum in Seattle became, and Scott shares his review of the most recent Matrix. He talks about binge watching Peace Maker on HBO, Justin explains the show, and the history behind the character. 61:17 – They talk about the different levels of mental illness, how crazy occurrences happen anywhere, and Scott reminds us we live in one of the safest times throughout history. Scott talks about his recent visit to the haunted hotel in Port Townsend, plans for them to go back as a group, and they wrap it up with Justin sharing that Don Wilson co-founder and rhythm guitarist of The Ventures passed away at the age of 88.
Giving Thanks For Jill's Treasure Hunt | Destination Linux 254 This week's episode of Destination Linux, we are going on a TREASURE HUNT in Jill's Computer Museum because the community's most loved segment is back! Then we're going to discuss iconic open-source software. Plus we've also got our famous tips, tricks and software picks. All of this and so much more this week on Destination Linux. So whether you're brand new to Linux and open source or a guru of sudo. This is the podcast for you. FrontPageLinux.com ►► https://frontpagelinux.com Full Show Notes (for links and such) https://destinationlinux.org/episode-254 Sponsored by: Digital Ocean = https://do.co/dln Bitwarden = https://bitwarden.com/dln Hosted by: Michael Tunnell = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan (DasGeek) = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Jill Bryant = https://jilllinuxgirl.com Want to Support the Show? Support us on Patreon = https://destinationlinux.org/patreon Support us on Sponsus = https://destinationlinux.org/sponsus DLN Store = http://dlnstore.com Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You can find all of our social accounts at https://destinationlinux.org/contact Full Show Notes (for links and such) https://destinationlinux.org/episode-254 00:00:00 = Welcome to DL 254 00:00:57 = Community Feedback: Software Keys Get Started with Linux & more 00:05:11 = Shoutout to Joe Collins 00:07:29 = Ryan working on building Tor Bridges 00:08:22 = DigitalOcean: App Platform ( https://do.co/dln ) 00:09:55 = Jill's Treasure Hunt Is Back! 00:19:32 = Computer Mouse Plus VOIP Phone :D 00:15:34 = Computer Mouse Plus FM Radio :D 00:10:45 = Computer Mouse Plus Phone :D 00:21:31 = Rollup Flexible Keyboard :D 00:24:59 = Open Source Software We Are Thankful For 00:25:59 = Standard Notes 00:29:15 = OBS Studio 00:34:47 = Linux Itself :D 00:35:51 = Git Version Control 00:37:58 = Firefox Web Browser (with Container Tabs) 00:41:21 = Bitwarden Password Manager 00:43:25 = Ryan's Lightning Round: OBS, Blender, & Audacity 00:43:47 = Michael's Lightning Round: Kdenlive, LibreOffice, WordPress, & FFMPEG 00:44:06 = VLC Media Player 00:44:53 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 00:46:23 = Your Kids Can Send Code to Space! 00:51:14 = Linux Gaming: I MAED A GAM3 W1TH Z0MB1ES 1N IT!!!1 00:55:53 = Software Spotlight: Speak from Sugar Labs 00:57:52 = Tip of the Week: commands that start with ‘ls' 01:00:42 = Linux Events: Game Sphere 24 Hour Stream 01:02:15 = Linux Events: Ohio Linux Fest 01:02:49 = Linux Events: Southern California Linux Expo 2022 (SCALE 19x) 01:03:11 = Jill at SCALE 01:03:22 = Michael at SCALE? 01:03:58 = Ryan tried to sneak in a Arch Linux reference lol 01:04:17 = Outro 01:06:53 = Outtakes LOL Join Odysee With Our DLN Invite Link = https://odysee.com/$/invite/@destinationlinux:9 Linux #OpenSource #Podcast
This week's episode of Destination Linux, we are going on a TREASURE HUNT in Jill's Computer Museum because the community's most loved segment is back! Then we're going to discuss iconic open-source software. Plus we've also got our famous tips, tricks and software picks. All of this and so much more this week on Destination […]
Deutsche im Alltag - Alltagsdeutsch | Deutsch Lernen | Deutsche Welle
Der deutsche Computerpionier Heinz Nixdorf gab ihm seinen Namen: dem Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum. Die Bandbreite des Museums reicht von alten Tontafeln über Telefone und Computerspiele bis zu „Petra“ und „Peter“.
Lois Reitzes speaks with multi-talented artist Maria White, Lynn Pollard, one of the organizers of the American Craft Council Atlanta/Southeast Craft Week, and woodwork artist Sabiha Mujtaba. Plus, City Lights engineer and contributor Shelley Kenneavy takes us inside The Computer Museum of America. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In aflevering 90 is Bart van den Akker te gast. Hij is de oprichter en directeur van het Home Computer Museum in Helmond. Dit museum heeft als taak computers, randapparatuur, software en de documentatie hiervan in hun oorspronkelijke staat te behouden, te preserveren en te herstellen waar mogelijk. Zodat de kennis, innovatie en de culturele waarde hiervan niet verloren of vergeten raakt voor toekomstige generaties. "Om de toekomst te maken moet het verleden worden begrepen" - een geanimeerd gesprek over de geschiedenis van de thuiscomputer. In de Week van.. kijken we kort vooruit naar het Apple WWDC event, bespreken we een nieuwe copyright wet die ook voor foto's en teksten zou gaan gelden; wat zijn daar de mogelijk voor- en nadelen van? Jeff Bezos heeft aangekondigd zelf ook de ruimte in te gaan. Wat is dat toch met miljardairs en ruimtevaart? Columnist Dimitry Vleugel (Androidworld.nl) bespreekt privacy en de EU; zou de EU niet zelf software als Google Docs moeten ontwikkelen, om een privacy-veilig alternatief voor de tech-giganten te bieden? Tijdschema: 00:02:06 Bart van den Akker van het Home Computer Museum 00:35:46 De "ruimte-race" van miljardairs 00:41:49 Een nieuwe EU copyright wet voor beeld en tekst 00:49:26 Columnist Dim over privacy; moet EU alternatieven bieden?
Episode Fourty-Three: Atlanta Music Evolution with Rachel Jackson & Shawty Slim. We discuss ATL Laws for future Atlanta residents, the growth of the Atlanta music scene and so much more. May is Mental Health Awareness Month #breakthestigma
In today's episode, I welcome Christopher John Garcia! Chris has had an amazing career journey as a museum curator and historian for the Computer History Museum, as well as podcaster and painter, and he talks about everything from AI-generated art to his podcast that discusses pieces of artwork in under three minutes. (Fun fact: the cover image for this episode is of one of Chris' original pieces of artwork!) Get in touch with Christopher John Garcia: https://www.facebook.com/JohnnyEponymous | https://www.instagram.com/johnnyeponymous/ Support Artfully Told: www.paypal.me/elevateart Artfully Told links: www.facebook.com/artfullytold | www.artfullytold.podbean.com | elevateartskc@gmail.com Get a free audiobook through Audible! http://www.audibletrial.com/ArtfullyTold Schedule your own interview as a featured guest with Artfully Told! https://calendly.com/artfullytold/podcast-interview Episode 52 - Christopher John Garcia Lindsey Dinneen: Hello, and welcome to Artfully Told, where we share true stories about meaningful encounters with art. [00:00:06] Krista: I think artists help people have different perspectives on every aspect of life. [00:00:12]Roman: All I can do is put my part in to the world. [00:00:15] Elizabeth: It doesn't have to be perfect the first time. It doesn't have to be perfect ever really. I mean, as long as you, and you're enjoying doing it and you're trying your best, that can be good enough. [00:00:23] Elna: Art is something that you can experience with your senses and that you just experiences as so beautiful. [00:00:31]Lindsey Dinneen: Hello, and welcome back to another episode of Artfully Told. I'm your host Lindsey, and I am delighted to have as my guest today, Christopher John Garcia, who is a curator, historian, and podcaster, and I'm just so excited to chat with him all about art and all the different ways that he has engaged with art and that he's currently still doing. And so thank you so much for being here, Chris. I really, really appreciate it. [00:01:00] Christopher John Garcia: Yeah, thanks so much for having me always glad to chat. [00:01:03] Lindsey Dinneen: Of course. If it's about art, I'm in. [00:01:05]Christopher John Garcia: Yeah, absolutely. [00:01:07] Lindsey Dinneen: Yes. Well again, thanks for being here. And I would just love if you would share maybe a little bit about your background, how you got involved in your various art forms, and maybe a little of where you are today, too. [00:01:21] Christopher John Garcia: Cool. Well, it's started long, long ago. 1999. I became a curator at the Computer History Museum and my focus was on computer graphics, music and art with an emphasis on early computer art. So 1950s through about 1980. And by going into that, you know, I had a little bit of an art history background. I minored in it in college and I've always been an art nerd. And I ended up starting a couple of podcasts that were actually centered around early computer art. One was called " Engineers and Enthusiasts," which is on a hiatus as soon as I can find all my files. But the second one is a "Three-Minute Modernist," which is, I take a single artwork usually, and I break it down in three minutes as sort of a, an emotional impact statement is what I do in three minutes, which can be a lot harder for big pieces than little you'd be surprised. But yeah, and so all of that. Then for some reason, I ended up staying home a lot in 2020, and I decided, you know, maybe I should become a painter. And so I, you know, I had never painted before. And so I decided, well fine. And I started doing a lot of my own paintings, which are semi-abstract expressionists works. What I usually do is I just squeeze paint directly onto paper, put another piece on top of it and then peel them apart. And then I'll do this with several sheets. So it's sort of a combination printing, painting methodology. But yeah, so it's, I'm your basic all around art nerd. [00:02:51] Lindsey Dinneen: I love it. Okay. Well, I am so excited to hear more about all of the different things, but especially the podcast. I'm so intrigued by that concept. I love it. What a challenge too, so kudos to you. But yeah. Okay. So breaking down artwork and sort of talking about it and having the constraint of three minutes, first of all, where did that idea come from? And then I guess second of all, how hard is that? [00:03:16]Christopher John Garcia: Well, the idea actually came from a Doctor Who podcast. There is a Doctor Who podcast called "Two-Minute Time Lord." And it is it takes a Doctor Who episode or a topic surrounding Dr. Who and does a two minute episode. That's basically what you would say around the water cooler. And I figured, you know what? If it's good enough for the goose, it's good enough to be stolen by the gander. And I decided to take that concept and apply it to art because one, art has sort of discreet chunks. And I was seeing a lot of works that were-- I wouldn't say small-- but they were works that you could sort of come up with at least a nugget that you could expand on in for a couple of minutes without problem. [00:04:03] And I learned that by looking at a discreet portion, it gave you one, a chance to really sort of look across the board. You could look at one piece from various areas, but two, it allowed you to go really fast. And so my proof of concept was a good five episodes before I released anything and realized, yeah, this will work. And then I realized that if I kept it to just modern and contemporary art, it would allow me to single out one area instead of going all the way around the world, having to deal with all the things, 'cause once you get into the more realist stuff and the movement and the genre works, you kind of get, you have to go longer. But with the contemporary stuff, you could more deal with the impact of the work on particularly, in this case, me and how it emotionally triggered sensations and feelings and take it sort of a little bit out of a, sort of a more academic realm and into a realm of art appreciation that I really love. Things like, you know, Sister Wendy, for example, used to be a favorite of mine, but there's not really one of those for contemporary arts, so much that deals directly with individual pieces. And, you know, I figured it'd be a great place to go. And I realized that "art podcast" is a crowded field. And I said, me too. [00:05:28]Lindsey Dinneen: Indeed. Well, good for you. And again, I love that concept and I just think that's so cool. So, okay. So in dealing with modern and contemporary art, are you-- just out of curiosity-- are you going to galleries and being inspired by something particular or are you finding things on the internet or how is your process of deciding which art to kind of feature and unpack? [00:05:54] Christopher John Garcia: Well, I have a very complex algorithm to do that. Random. Basically, yeah, I go to a lot of museums. In particular, I go to SF MOMA, the Anderson collection at Stanford, the Cantor Art Museum when I can get there to moment itself. And I also have a massive collection of photographs because I'm that guy at a museum who takes a picture of everything. So it's really based largely on what I encounter typically at museums. I do some web stuff. In particular, I'm starting to do more stuff with Instagram artists who I meet typically through Clubhouse who are working. And I find pieces that really resonate with something I speak of a lot. Like the next issue I'm doing is about a work that very much reminds me of two of my favorite artists, Lichtenstein and then Sam Francis, and it looks like what happened if they were to work together. [00:06:46]But yeah, it's all over the place. One of our recent episodes was about the work of Sol LeWitt that they turned into an app. I think it was by The Met, but it might've been a sort of an associated group that was how Sol LeWitt and his work-- and it's this very contained app that actually gives you a lot of different views into how Sol LeWitt goes. So it's a little bit across the board. I do some video art, a little bit of music, but I tend towards sound art and soundscape type stuff. And sort of looking at how they are still, it's all about the effect of you more emotionally, but also there's sort of what I call the emotional intellect, which is a thought that you have that isn't necessarily logical or reasonable, but it is a thought that provokes that same sort of region. [00:07:42]Lindsey Dinneen: Cool. Very cool. Well, and you know, random is good too. I like complex algorithm. That was entertaining. So, okay. So yeah, that sounds like a really interesting way to go about it in terms of, you know, it's, it's also just like, well, what is speaking to me right now? And then, so I'm curious, in your process for these episodes, I know you've talked about maybe unpacking it sort of on an emotional level in what it evokes, but are you also going into the history? Are you looking into the context behind it from the artist's point of view or mostly just sticking with your own personal interpretation? [00:08:20]Christopher John Garcia: You kind of have to do both. And you know, for example, if I talk about "Guernica" by Picasso, you kind of have to say the Spanish Civil War happened. But you don't necessarily have to go into specifically Picasso's long history in Cubism, his blue period, but you kind of have to make nods toward them . But what's really fascinating in a work like-- "Guernica" is a great example, and an episode I haven't done-- is when you pull out an aspect that has an emotional impact on you and for me, it's that, that wailing mother with her hands up and that sort of disjointed head that emotional impact also triggers an idea that, "Oh, well, this actually very much speaks to Picasso's Cubist period, this very much has this sort of the blue period emotional impact that he carried through the early part of his career." So it sort of naturally flows out of that, that you do deal with some of the, the history and the technique aspect. I don't deal deeply with technique most of the time, largely because art technique is still a little bit mysterious to me, but I really do try. You know, art has, if I decided to go in all art history nerd, like I often do with my wife, sadly it would be a six hour podcast. [00:09:44]Lindsey Dinneen: So then in knowing yourself, you know what you need to limit yourself to. I like it. Yeah. I like it. Okay, cool. Well, okay. So your career is very cool and very unique, and I'm just curious, how do you sort of fall into an-- obviously you didn't fall into it-- but fall into a job like that because, I mean, what, what was your background that enabled you to then become this, this curator of a museum? That's just really interesting. [00:10:14] Christopher John Garcia: Yeah. Funny, you should ask. I was a floor worker, I basically a docent and tour guide and someone who told you to stop touching objects at the old Computer Museum in Boston. And it was slowly falling apart and getting ready to close. It would eventually be bought out by the Museum of Science. And I grew up in the Bay Area and I was out in Boston at that museum, but they had an affiliate in California. So when I went home for Christmas, one year I decided to visit and they said, "Yeah, we've got this job opening." And I said, "I will apply for this job because Boston is cold." And I ended up getting the job. Literally I fell into it because no one else wanted the job. It was $12.50 an hour. And no one else wanted that in Silicon Valley at that point except for me. [00:11:05]And yeah, for 20 years that's what I did and what was great is that I was largely in charge of my own research interests. And that was fascinating. When you give the freedom to a curator to go and investigate what truly interests them and what they think is missing in the museum, what you gain is an incredible amount of insight and a lot of extra labor from the person who's actually doing the research. And it turned out that a lot of the stuff that I was doing was not only stuff that we didn't know previously, but we didn't see how it connected to the bigger world. And it was just a great job. 20 years. I got laid off in 2019, sadly. Hashtag #learntofundraise. But the real, the real fascinating thing about, you know, lucking into this gig, like I had my art history background, but really it was the fact that I knew how to give a really good tour, ended up getting me the job and, you know, I held onto it because it's just a thing that I really understood. And I think I really grew up with the museum itself. [00:12:13] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah. Cool. How incredible. And I love that you were given that autonomy and freedom to explore the things that interested you and then get to just learn and grow. That's really cool. I think that's awesome. And so what was the most surprising thing maybe that you learned along that journey? [00:12:36]Christopher John Garcia: So it, it's both surprising-- and then when I think about it, not at all surprising-- I got to go and meet a artist by the name of Harold Cohen. . Initially I knew him, his sort of work from the sixties and very early seventies as an abstract painter, sort of along the lines of if Hawking was working completely... David Hockney, not Hawking. Hawking is the scientist. Hockney was working completely abstract. Very, very great color palette, amazing line, but he got very interested in artificial intelligence and developed a system called Aaron, the AARON Paint System, which he developed for almost 40 years. And I got to spend a couple of days with him. [00:13:28] And what was so surprising was he was talking about when he got into AI, it wasn't that-- the art community naturally sort of rejected the work because it wasn't clear who was the artist? Was it Harold Cohen or was it AARON, the Paint System that he developed. And it wasn't that 'cause that I understood, but it was that when you program a system to create art, it is naturally going to attempt to create art in the mode of its creator. Because the creator understands art in that way. So all AARON is a set of rules, but when you define a set of rules, you're going to define it with your own biases already installed. And it's fascinating to see that. [00:14:23] And I managed to also connect with another computer music pioneer, who also does visual arts with his programs, guy by the name of David Cope. And he recognized that. And what he did to avoid that was he made it possible to input external work by, in his case for music mini files, from, you know, Shostakovitch, Scott Joplin, Bach, and so he removed himself from the set of rules. The rules were defined by the input, and it was so interesting that I never thought in a million years that just setting a set of rules into a computer program would actually have that much effect. And then when I thought about it, it was like, "Yeah, of course that's how you would do it." And then I realized, wait, there's a way to do it where it's not actually your rules. It's someone else's. I just love that. [00:15:15] Lindsey Dinneen: Yes. Oh my goodness. That is so cool. I didn't even know that those technologies existed. So that's really fascinating to me that that's even a thing. How cool! [00:15:27] Christopher John Garcia: Well, what's incredible about that is right now, we are in an absolute Renaissance of AI art. And it's scary because it is very, very quickly being monetized. We saw some of the first works done almost. All the major AI art is being done in Europe right now. In particular there's our groups in Amsterdam, in a couple different places in France, England. And what's amazing is that now they're starting to go to auctions and fetching high sums, but this isn't where we're going to see AI art. We're going to see AI art in hotel lobbies, hotel rooms, any place where large-scale art creation is necessary. And right now, almost all that work is outsourced typically to China or small artists who are willing to work for relatively cheap for reproduction. In this case, it's highly possible that AI will be creating all the art we encounter in public corporate spaces, and that's a very big change and will have a very big impact on not only the art market, but the art market that no one thinks about: the commercial art market for commercial properties. [00:16:36] Lindsey Dinneen: Hm. So do you think that that's a good thing or is it not necessarily inherently good or bad? It just is different. [00:16:45]Christopher John Garcia: Yeah. That's... I go back and forth and it depends on how much I like computer programmers at the moment. I think it is a good thing in that we are developing systems that are able to get art out more quickly. And I think it's a bad thing of course, because it is going to put some artists out of work, but by having the work that can get out more quickly, it is going to drive the art market in general broader. And that's going to allow more artists to actually get work, to get commissions. Now, how, how that drives against one another, it's hard to tell. And new technologies and art are changing everything. And so it's a really, we're on kind of a knife's edge and we could fall either direction. We could either end up with a market that is an, a, an output that is AI driven. We have very little, as of yet, AI generated art that has made it into the museum space. And when you really look at the history of art, it's the stuff that gets into the museum space that ends up being the most significant. We're still seeing a massive influx of artists working today who are being displayed in museums. So I think the human is still going to be the more significant player in what art means and becomes, but I think AI is going to be a major part of what sells and that, you know, who knows which direction that'll go. [00:18:27] Lindsey Dinneen: Sure. Yeah. Cool. Yeah. It's going to be really interesting to follow that journey then and see what does end up happening and how does it twist and weave through different avenues and yeah, that's going to be really different. Like, I'm, I'm just wrapping my head around it right now, thinking about it, because again, I didn't know these technologies existed, so I'm like, huh? Okay. So, you know, you mentioned that you started taking that painting. What kind of artwork do you tend to lean towards with your own? Is it more abstract? Is it more realistic? What do you like? [00:19:05] Christopher John Garcia: Oh, it's a hundred percent abstract just because I don't have the skills to actually do representational. But one of the things on my Instagram is that I'll post an image where it's literally, I squoze three tubes of paint onto a piece of paper. I covered it with a little glue and I put another piece of paper on top of it and I scan it later, usually after it dries, but when it doesn't dry, my wife gets mad. And people will start to recognize that, "Oh, that's obviously a picture of X, Y, and Z." And one of the other things I do on the side is I publish zines and I had squished a whole bunch of acrylic paint that I just tossed onto a piece of paper and I peeled it off, but I had let it dry a little bit before I squished it. So it made this sort of feathery looking look and it looks exactly like the cryptid known as Moth Man. [00:19:56] And at that point I realized that something there's something in the sort of the chance operations space, that where even if you're not actively trying to create representational image, representational image will come forth. And so that picture of Moth Man, as I call it now, is a picture of Moth Man, even though I wasn't painting Moth Man. I wasn't painting anything. I was just putting paint on paper and that really, for me, raises some interesting questions as well. If I didn't mean to paint Moth Man, did I paint Moth Man? And the answer for me to that is, of course I'm painted Moth Man. What, are you crazy? Although I could get into the whole thing of that. Maybe Moth Man is some sort of entity that was working through me to make sure I painted a painting of him. But that might be a bridge too far, even for me. [00:20:45] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah, sure. Of course. Well, that's cool. Oh my goodness. Okay. And so is that something that you anticipate you'll continue doing even sort of after things hopefully return to normal? [00:21:00]Christopher John Garcia: Yeah, I think what's really fascinating is that once I realized I loved the act of painting, I realized even more that I loved the material of painting. And I, I think painting can be a process that is laborious, that is tedious, that is mind numbing. It can also be one that is brief, that is freeing, that is inexact. And for me, it's definitely the latter, but the things that I love about it is just looking at how things react with one another. Like if I put oils and acrylics and inks on the same page and put a little Elmer's glue on top of it, and then put another page on top of it, the way it feels under the hand. Like that's a sensation that I can't think of repeating. And it's one that doesn't take long. It's just a couple of minutes even. And there's that sensation that's an irreplaceable thing. It's the aspect of the artists that I don't know if I ever really understood until I started painting myself, is that there are sensations to this that don't exist many other places. That the actual act of making marks on paper, on a canvas, whatever has a feeling. And when you find a feeling that is pleasurable or relieving or funky, you know, you're going to want to keep going back to that. So I don't see myself stopping painting. Probably painting a little less, but definitely it's something I'll keep doing that. And I have an Instagram to fill, so yes. [00:22:51] Lindsey Dinneen: Fair enough. Well, excellent. Well, I'm just curious. I know you've gotten to meet some pretty cool artists yourself-- and obviously your experiences as a curator and as a podcaster have probably lent themselves to some really memorable moments-- but I wonder if there's anything that kind of really stands out to you as an encounter with art that was like just something to remember to kind of file back there and return to every once in awhile. [00:23:17]Christopher John Garcia: Oh yeah. Bunch. I mean my first time I ever met an artist artist-- well, the first time I ever encountered an artist, this I should actually point out-- was Andy Warhol. And I didn't get to meet him, but I sat right behind him at Madison Square Garden at a WWF wrestling show. [00:23:38] Lindsey Dinneen: Wow. [00:23:39] Christopher John Garcia: And he was always in the front row and always taking pictures with his little camera. But little seven year old me, I couldn't talk to them because even I knew who he was and I was seven, but I got to know Robert Rauschenberg a little bit because he would visit our college and he was a fascinating human in many ways. But what I learned when I went to a big exhibit of his at SF MOMA was that his interests were so broad because he was so interesting and wanted to make the world as interested in things as he was. And it was like one of the best things. Again, this is something that people may not realize, every pop artist loves wrestling. I do not know why this is true, but everyone I've met-- Rauschenberg, Warhol, didn't meet him, but still-- Lichtenstein, Marisol, all of them love wrestling. And what Robert Rauschenberg said that one time when we were-- 'cause you'd stopped by class, then a lot of us would go out drinking afterwards-- he said "You know, you have to be careful how you are positioning your art, whether or not it is referencing the zeitgeists or referencing some niche topics that only two people in the gallery will get." And it's, you know, if you do a painting of whole Cogan, everyone will get it. It's a zeitgeist. But if you're talking about Pak Song and Dusty Rhodes, you're talking about niche. [00:25:09] And at that point, one, this was obviously made for me, even though he didn't know it. But two, he was really saying something that I bought into because you know, oh, this idea that there is a universality, but there's also a place for niche, which I love. But he was a really fun guy. I didn't see him after probably '97, but really had a good time with him. And I was very lucky. Another guy who's known more for music, but is actually a wonderful visual artist, is Mark Mothersbaugh of Divo. And I got to interview him, do an oral history with him. He has a fascinating eye for the world. And every day he writes one postcard size image he creates and he has thousands of them and they're beautiful. But then he was also doing this a very simple thing where he took classic, often Victorian, sometimes early 20th century photographs and uses Photoshop to place a mirror image of it. So it gives you that sort of awkward exactly symmetrical look. [00:26:14] But yeah, those have been two of my favorite. I've been lucky that I've gotten to meet a lot of really fun artists through the museum. You know, there were a lot of folks who didn't feel like early computer was being talked about enough and we're very happy to have anyone who would be interested in this stuff. But always, you know, artists like everyone, there are good ones who are wanting to talk to you all day long. And there are others who don't. You sort of learned which is which. [00:26:44]Lindsey Dinneen: For sure, for sure. Well, yeah. And, you know, just, it's so funny 'cause obviously everyone has different personalities and I would second that some artists are a little more approachable than others, but you know, that is okay. Well, I'm sure that some of our listeners are going to be super interested in your work, both as a podcaster and as a painter. And I'm wondering if there are ways for us to, of course, A) listen to your podcast and then B) check out some of your artwork. [00:27:14] Christopher John Garcia: Oh, there absolutely are. I have my podcast on the internet, just look for "Three-Minute Modernist" and you will find it all over the place. And then you can find my artwork and pictures of my kids, also things I cook, on Instagram at Johnny Eponymous, J O H N N Y E P O N Y MOU S. I'm also the same thing on Twitter, the same thing on Facebook, the same thing on pretty much everything. Since Friendster, I've been Johnny Eponymous. But yeah, and I'm, yeah, I'm all over the place. It's hard to miss me. [00:27:48] Lindsey Dinneen: Perfect. Awesome. Well, first of all, thank you just so much again for being here and sharing your stories. And I'm just so fascinated learning about how technology and art intersect, and that's just so cool that you shared that very unique perspective. So I definitely appreciate that. I do have three questions that I always like to ask my guests, if you're okay with that. [00:28:10]Christopher John Garcia: Whew... [00:28:10]Lindsey Dinneen: I know. [00:28:11] Christopher John Garcia: I'm ready. [00:28:12] Lindsey Dinneen: It's pressure. [00:28:12] Christopher John Garcia: I'm ready. [00:28:13] Lindsey Dinneen: Okay. First of all, how do you personally define art or what is art to you? [00:28:20]Christopher John Garcia: Art is that thing you do that is mostly useless, but ultimately important. [00:28:27]Lindsey Dinneen: Okay. Care to elaborate, or are we just going to leave that be? [00:28:32]Christopher John Garcia: I'll elaborate slightly. It is the shape of the tool, not the use of the tool, I think is the way I, I wrote it in a paper once when I was trying to be smart. It's really about something that brings you an emotional experience of some sort that isn't just because of what it does, but what it is. And so, you know, we have paintings around the house 'cause my wife's mother's a actual painter who paints actual paintings. And every time I see one of them, it makes me feel hungry and it's because there's all sorts of food in it. But, you know, I consider that to be art because it draws an emotion out of me. [00:29:15] Lindsey Dinneen: Sure, sure. Perfect. Okay. [00:29:18] Christopher John Garcia: It's also a good painting of food. [00:29:20] Lindsey Dinneen: Oh, there you go. Perfect. Oh yeah. Well, that's a, that's a very unique answer and I like it. Okay. So, secondly, what do you think is the most important role of an artist? [00:29:32]Christopher John Garcia: To make art. I mean, really, that's what it comes down to, I think. Wanting an artist to be a philosopher, a spokesman, any of that? Really not as important as the fact that they just create the work. [00:29:49]Lindsey Dinneen: Sure. And then finally, I'll define my terms a little bit in this last question, but do you think that art should be inclusive or exclusive? And by inclusive, I'm referring to an artist who puts their work out there and shares a little bit of context behind that, whether it's program notes or the inspiration or a title. Just something to give the viewer an idea of what went into the creation. Versus exclusive referring to an artist who does put their work out there, but doesn't provide the context and therefore leaves it entirely up to the viewer to interpret it at will. [00:30:25]Christopher John Garcia: I'm going to throw you a curve ball and say there is no such thing as an inclusive artist. [00:30:31] Lindsey Dinneen: Okay. Ooh. Tell me more. [00:30:33]Christopher John Garcia: Everything an artist does is meant to be interpreted, is meant to be placed into a context. So that would be now exclusive. Nevermind. But yeah, they, every purpose choice you make is giving you more of a clue. If an artist says, "This is not titled," it doesn't mean he is just-- I don't care what you call it-- it's, he's making a choice. He doesn't want to give you the direction, but there is a direction and, you know, I've, I always think of-- I think it was Barnett Newman who once said I paint a zip. I put a line down a canvas. To me, that's a line. To someone else that could be a streetlight. And we're both right. [00:31:25]Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah. [00:31:26] Christopher John Garcia: And I think that, you know, I think everything an artist does has the reason that it's done to bring about some thought, even if that thing that they do isn't giving you any background, but is giving you the lack of background. That seems strange, but in my brain it works. [00:31:48]Lindsey Dinneen: Well, I really, that is the most unique answer I've received for that question. So I like that. That is a really interesting point. So thank you for sharing that perspective because I really that's going to make me think about that even more. So thank you for that. [00:32:05]Christopher John Garcia: I do what I can. [00:32:06] Lindsey Dinneen: I know. I appreciate it. Well, thank you just so very much for being here today, Chris, I really appreciate your time and you sharing your background and what you're up to. And I'm so excited about your podcast. And I encourage all of our listeners to also check out Chris's podcast and subscribe and all that good stuff, because obviously he brings a cool, unique perspective and it's three minutes. So, like the perfect way to just start your day. So thank you again, Chris. And I just want to commend you for everything that you're doing and sharing art with the world. I really think that that's important and kudos to you. [00:32:49]Christopher John Garcia: Well, thank you much. It's been so much fun. [00:32:51] Lindsey Dinneen: Good. Yeah. Well, and thank you to everyone who's listened to this episode and if you're feeling as inspired as I am right now, I would love if you would share this with a friend or two, and we will catch you next time. [00:33:04] If you have a story to share with us, we would love that so much. And I hope your day has been Artfully Told.
Die News sind wieder voll von ungewolltem Datenreichtum und fragwürdigen Weichenstellungen. Da konzentrieren wir uns doch lieber auf das, was im Wortsinne naheliegt, und sprechen mit der Leiterin des Zuse-Computermuseums in Hoyerswerda über digitale Transformationsprozesse in einer Region, die sich mitten im Strukturwandel befindet.Shownotes: Shownotes als Textdatei Shownotes als Webseite Musik-Links 0:58:27: HFSP von Matt Hodl, Lizenz: Freigabe durch den Künstler unter der Bedingung Attribution (Nennung, Spenden-Link via Bitcoin). 1:33:18: Zuse Z3 von Stanislav Bobrytskyy 2013, Lizenz: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0).
Executive Director of Computer Museum of America Rena Youngblood is in the studio for today's episode of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio. Joined by co-hosts Carol Morgan and Todd Schnick, the group discusses several can't miss exhibits, fun-filled summer camps and an exciting in-person event! Youngblood is the first Executive Director of the Computer Museum of America. Before joining the museum team, she worked in education and association for over 10 years. She was with the Georgia Charter School Association for seven years and then moved on to the National Teacher's Association for five years. In January of 2020, Youngblood fell in love with the potential of the museum and started working with the nonprofit. The mission of the Computer Museum of America is to preserve, educate, inspire and empower. The museum is designed to help everyone – children and adults – remember how far we have advanced with technology in a relatively short amount of time. Located in Atlanta, the museum offers a look into the past and a glimpse of the future of computing. Due to the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, the Computer Museum of America had to make several changes like many other businesses in the world. During this change, the museum shifted its focus internally. While visitors were not allowed to attend the museum, the staff of the Computer Museum of America worked to upgrade the design and layout of the building to better prepare for when people could return. The Computer Museum of America is gearing up for its first event planned to take place on April 29, 2021. Bytes, Brews and Bourbon is the first of many after-hours events. Taking place on Thursday from 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m., the event will have live music from The Bourbon Brothers, delicious light appetizers, adult beverages for purchase and the unveiling of a new exhibit. The new exhibit will feature computers from movies. The museum currently has several fun-filled and informative exhibits for attendees to peruse. The Timeline of Computer History offers a complete timeline of artifacts from the digital past through today. Highlights include Datapoint 2200, Altair 8800 and an original Apple 1, as well as Atari 2600, Gameboy, Nintendo, Commodore 64 and so much more! The entire timeline has over 2,000 points of interest. Another fascinating exhibit at the museum is A Tribute to Apollo 11. This immersive exhibit offers viewings of an animated documentary, Getting to the Moon and Back, as well as several types of computers NASA used. The exhibit also features dioramas of scenes from Apollo 11-17. A Tribute to Apollo 11 joined the museum after the 50th anniversary of the mission in 2019. The Supercomputing exhibit at the Computer Museum of America offers an extensive collection of supercomputers. This exhibit illustrates the impact of these machines on daily lives from weather predictions to artificial intelligence and cybersecurity. The most recent exhibit from the Computer Museum of America is The Enigma Machine. Used by the Germans in World War II, this machine was designed to secure communication between military personnel. Around 40,000 Enigma machines were created, and it is estimated that less than 300 are currently intact today. Gearing up for the summer, the Computer Museum of America has four week-long camps planned in the upcoming months. Attendance in the summer camps will be capped at 10 campers per class. The Full STEAM Ahead summer camp is designed for fourth- through eighth-graders. Each day, campers will take on one of the elements of STEAM, progressing through science, technology, engineering, art and math. Running from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday, the camp is expected to have tons of fun activities, experiments and learning opportunities. To register for one of the summer camps, visit www.computermuseumofamerica.org/calendar. In addition to the 35,000 square feet of museum,
Executive Director of Computer Museum of America Rena Youngblood is in the studio for today’s episode of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio. Joined by co-hosts Carol Morgan and Todd Schnick, the group discusses several can’t miss exhibits, fun-filled summer camps and an exciting in-person event! Youngblood is the first Executive Director of the Computer Museum […] The post Computer Museum of America Opens Can’t Miss, Family-Friendly Exhibits appeared first on Atlanta Real Estate Forum.
This week on Destination Linux, we're going to discuss firewalls. Specifically, what the heck are they? Do you need to set one up? Does your distro have a default firewall and our favorite firewall software. Google is now a privacy ally…or at least that's what they're marketing. Later in the show, we're going to discuss 0 A.D. and Steam Link enhancements for Linux. Plus we've also got our famous tips, tricks and software picks. All of this and so much more this week on Destination Linux. So whether you're brand new to Linux and open source or a guru of sudo. This is the podcast for you. Sponsored by: Digital Ocean = https://do.co/dln Bitwarden = https://bitwarden.com/dln Hosted by: Michael Tunnell = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan (DasGeek) = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Jill Bryant = https://twitter.com/jill_linuxgirl Noah Chelliah = https://asknoahshow.com Want to Support the Show? Support us on Patreon = https://destinationlinux.org/patreon Support us on Sponsus = https://destinationlinux.org/sponsus DLN Store = http://dlnstore.com Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You can find all of our social accounts at https://destinationlinux.org/contact Full Show Notes (for links and such) https://destinationlinux.org/episode-216 00:00 = Welcome to DL 216 01:04 = Reminder: DLN LUGcast on March 21st! 01:47 = Community Feedback: Linux Laptops with Touchscreen Support 06:18 = Digital Ocean: App Platform / Cloud ( https://do.co/dln ) 07:45 = Do you need a Firewall on Linux? 24:07 = Noah Outtake :D 27:40 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 29:31 = Google Cares About Your Privacy Again? 40:21 = Valve's Steam Link Now Available On Linux 44:15 = Game of the Week: 0 A.D. 47:53 = Software Spotlight: Optimizer 48:49 = Tip of the Week: Podman Checkpoints 49:35 = Ryan's Visit to Computer Museum of America in Roswell GA 54:08 = Outro Ryan's OnionShare Video ►► https://youtu.be/lM6TPNpl9bg Linux #OpenSource #Podcast
Picture of a lake rendered in R3D v2. By Andy Jones. Winner of organic section of the recent Amiga Swapshop BBS Raytracing Competition. NEWS Amiga Ireland Online: 2021 happens on January 16th – get your tickets (link) Alanna Kelly, Director at the Computer Museum of Ireland has finished a huge website revamp with her group. … Continue reading "Floppy Fodder"
This week we chat with Rena Youngblood, the Executive Director of The Computer Museum of America, located right in Roswell. Listen in to hear why the museum is located here, what exhibits they display, the event space they offer and why you should visit. We hope you enjoy listening! Plan your trip to Roswell, Georgia at www.visitroswellga.com Follow on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter Intro music: Higher by LiQWYD | www.instagram.com/liqwyd Music promoted by www.free-stock-music.com Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US
NEWS Ask Your Amiga – Wolfram Alpha client for the Amiga (link) New OS4 blog for developers (link) Wayfarer – version 1.5 of the Web browser just got released (link) Online BASIC programming workshop for the Commodore 64 with the Computer Museum of Ireland and Rob Cranley. Register here (link) Amiga Ireland 2021 is canceled … Continue reading "“Everybody Online, Looking Good”"
Rena Youngblood, Computer Museum of America (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 293) Executive Director Rena Youngblood, Computer Museum of America, discusses the organization’s founding, mission, and vision with host John Ray. “North Fulton Business Radio is produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta. Rena Youngblood, Executive Director, Computer Museum of […] The post Rena Youngblood, Computer Museum of America appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
There is a massive knowledge gap regarding what is going on in Russia and how it all started with the demoscene and retro scene in general in a country that is mostly known for sending us Tetris with love. AJ and Joerg talk to the the Founder of the museum Pavel Anokhin and to the Technical Manager Oleg Senin about what is going on in Russia in those regards. The interview starts at 9:45
Star Trek: Lower Decks has debuted, and Transporter Lock returns to the air to review this new animated series! This half-hour comedy is faithful to Star Trek lore, but Ken and Bri find its humor falls flat. Lt. Commander Joe Strosnider of Joe’s Computer Museum joins the podcast crew as a special guest, lending his … The post Lower Decks S1E01: Second Contact first appeared on Transporter Lock - A Star Trek: Discovery podcast.
American Greed Factory-Episode 376: Stream of Consciousness phone driven newscasts, Youtube restoration shows, Surplus vehicle fun, Used planes, Repo, The Vast of Night, Hellraiser, Computer Museum, James Joyce The Dubliners, Netflix originalUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. the Reverend.
Episode Notes The place had a leaky roof, was a terrible place to keep artifacts, and more than once did I have to sleep there, but it was also a place of multi-sensory magic! Find out more at https://siligone-valley.pinecast.co
Episode Notes The Computer Museum History Center was the Silicon Valley spin-off of The Computer Museum in Boston. It was a magical, strange, wonderful place, that eventually became some other museum that is now dead to me. Find out more at https://siligone-valley.pinecast.co
Episode Notes One of Douglas Adams' final appearances was at the Museum, featured him telling stories, and gifting a wonderful artifact of his career that you can still see on display at some museum. Find out more at https://siligone-valley.pinecast.co
I went to Dreamhack Atlanta on Saturday and basked in the glow of the bright stages of esports, even though it's not really a part of gaming I'm into...I still had a great time, though. On Sunday, I went to a retro exhibit at the Computer Museum of America in Roswell, GA, and got to try VR64 - a WORKING Virtual Reality headset for the Commodore 64! Google Stadia is launching this week without some advertised features...and without some founders not getting their hardware on time. Meanwhile, Microsoft announced that the Project xCloud Preview is working with 50 games. Then we take calls about Google Stadia and Rob Roberts' trip to New York City.
Computers have undoubtedly evolved from their humble beginnings to the lifeline super machines they are today. Computer Museum of America (CMoA) Founder Lonnie Mimms and Vice President Karin Mimms join this week’s Around Atlanta segment of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio to discuss the museum’s mission, artifacts and exhibits with co-hosts Carol Morgan and Todd […] The post Computer Museum of America Preserves the Past to Inspire the Future appeared first on Atlanta Real Estate Forum.
Computers have undoubtedly evolved from their humble beginnings to the lifeline super machines they are today. Computer Museum of America (CMoA) Founder Lonnie Mimms and Vice President Karin Mimms join this week's Around Atlanta segment of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio to discuss the museum's mission, artifacts and exhibits with co-hosts Carol Morgan and Todd Schnick. What initially started as an effort to collect and protect vintage computers has evolved into one of the world's most all-inclusive collections of computing artifacts, helping preserve the history of computing for generations to come. CMoA serves as a permanent record of the computer evolution process and the market experiments that drove discovery forward. Visitors of all ages enjoy engaging exhibits that share stories and highlight artifacts throughout the history of computing. In addition to temporary pop-up exhibits, CMoA has loaned rare artifacts to other museums including the Smithsonian Institution. Current exhibits include: A Tribute to Apollo 11 Beginning with an animated documentary, Getting to the Moon and Back, A Tribute to Apollo 11 shows the type of computers that NASA used from an IBM 3420, a front panel of an IBM 360, modular computer systems and more. Completely immerse yourself in the history of Rocketry, the race to space and 3D views of space from the Apollo missions. Supercomputing: Vanquishing the Impossible Serving as a tribute to the father of supercomputing, Seymour Cray, this exhibit displays more than 70 supercomputers showing weather predictions, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and more. From the iconic Cray1A and Pixar Machine, Sun Microsystems, to the Connection Machine 2 and a life-size mural of the IBM summit. Timeline of Computer History Beginning with the catalysts of the digital age including an abacus, slide rules, a rotary telephone and a transistor radio, this exhibit takes you through the decades with its artifacts of the digital past that include a Datapoint 2200, original Apple 1, the infamous RadioShack TRS80, a rare Apple Lisa 1, Gameboy, Nintendo, Commodore 64 and more. Byte Wall Magazine Collection A true display of nostalgia, CMoA also features a complete collection of Byte magazine covers including special editions. Step back in time and see how Byte Magazine covers told stories and moved to a product catalog. Two original Robert Tinney artwork covers are on display in the collection. The computer museum offers a fun, thought-provoking way to learn about the digital age. To learn more about CMoA including its unique artifacts, plans to expand and more, listen to the complete interview above or visit www.ComputerMuseumOfAmerica.org. A special thank you to Jackson EMC for sponsoring Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio. Jackson EMC offers homebuyers peace of mind and lower bills with its certified Right Choice™ new home program. These homes are built to be energy efficient and sustainable with improved indoor air quality, convenience and comfort. For more information on Right Choice new homes and Jackson EMC, visit https://RightChoice.JacksonEMC.com. Please subscribe to Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio on iTunes. If you like this week's show, be sure to rate it. The “Around Atlanta” segment, sponsored by Denim Marketing, is designed to showcase the best of metro Atlanta – the communities, attractions and special events that make this city great. To submit your event, community or attraction to the Around Atlanta edition of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio, contact Denim Marketing at 770-383-3360 or fill out the Atlanta Real Estate Forum contact form here.
Ein kurzes und interessantes Interview mit Dr. Stefan Höltgen. Auch hierüber bin ich sehr froh, dass er sich die Zeit für uns genommen hat. Weitere wichtige Info's zu Dr. Stefan Höltgen und dem OCM findest du hier unten in der Beschreibung. Viel Spaß und bis im nächsten Video! Dein Christoph Du interessierst dich für das Buch von Stefan? Link zum Buch findest du hier: https://www.amazon.de/RESUME-Hands-Retrocomputing-Computerarch%C3%A4ologie-Band/dp/3897333961/ref=sr_1_1?__mk_de_DE=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&keywords=resume&qid=1559917412&s=books&sr=1-1 Autor: Stefan Höltgen Titel: RESUME: Hands-on Retrocomputing (Computerarchäologie, Band 1) Taschenbuch – 28. April 2016 ISBN-10: 3897333961 ISBN-13: 978-3897333963 Zum Interview mit Thiemo Eddiks - Erster Teil: https://youtu.be/fINE6NiIbk0 Internetseite vom OCM: https://www.computermuseum-oldenburg.de/ Hier findest du das Computermuseum: Oldenburger Computer-Museum e.V. (gemeinnützig) Bahnhofsplatz 10 26122 Oldenburg Weitere Info's zu Öffnungszeiten, Preisen und der Anfahrt: https://www.computermuseum-oldenburg.de/informationen.html Das OCM in den sozialen Netzen: https://www.facebook.com/OldenburgerComputerMuseum https://www.instagram.com/oldenburger_computer_museum https://twitter.com/OCM_ #computermuseum #oldenburg #bremerhaven #ocm Green Secure ist eine Computerfirma aus Bremerhaven. Außer den klassischen EDV bzw. IT Dienstleistungen, bieten wir auch viel zu IT-Sicherheit. Unsere Projekte sind zukunftsweisend und interessant. Newsletter gefällig? Erhalte neue Tipps, Tricks & Geschichten von uns: https://www.green-secure.de/newsletter/ Du hörst Spotify? Hier ist unser Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0E7vPx8cKSuewZL4UZgTyW Du bist bei iTunes? Podcast auch hier: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/green-secure-podcast/id1449020620?mt=2 Abonniere unseren Kanal: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVMYNn06o3uovnnzVQMKG9g?sub_confirmation=1 Website: https://www.green-secure.de Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GreenSecureBHV/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/greensecurebhv/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/GreenSecureGmbH XING: https://www.xing.com/companies/greensecuregmbh Christoph arbeitet seit Anfang der 1990er Jahre mit Computern. Er ist gelernter Fachinformatiker und hat später im Energie- und Umweltbereich ein Ingenieursstudium absolviert. Er hat die Green Secure GmbH gegründet um die Welt in eine neue Richtung zu bringen. Er möchte allen Menschen helfen, im Umgang mit den neuen Medien besser zu werden. Christoph hat Kooperationen mit Schulen und gibt Kurse an der Volkshochschule in Bremerhaven. Außerdem steht er Firmen und Privatleuten stetig beratend zur Seite und hat großen Spaß an Schulungen.
Heute kann ich dir ganz stolz ein Interview mit Thiemo Eddiks vom Oldenburger Computer-Museum e.V. zeigen. Ich bin sehr dankbar das Thiemo sich die Zeit für uns genommen hat. Weitere wichtige Info's zum OCM findest du hier unten in der Beschreibung. Viel Spaß und bis im nächsten Podcast! Dein Christoph Internetseite vom OCM: https://www.computermuseum-oldenburg.de/ Hier findest du das Computermuseum: Oldenburger Computer-Museum e.V. (gemeinnützig) Bahnhofsplatz 10 26122 Oldenburg Weitere Info's zu Öffnungszeiten, Preisen und der Anfahrt: https://www.computermuseum-oldenburg.de/informationen.html Das OCM in den sozialen Netzen: https://www.facebook.com/OldenburgerComputerMuseum https://www.instagram.com/oldenburger_computer_museum https://twitter.com/OCM_ Oder du interessierst dich für das Retro-Computer-Buch von Dr. Stefan Höltgen? Link zum Buch findest du hier: https://www.amazon.de/RESUME-Hands-Retrocomputing-Computerarch%C3%A4ologie-Band/dp/3897333961/ref=sr_1_1?__mk_de_DE=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&keywords=resume&qid=1559917412&s=books&sr=1-1 Autor: Stefan Höltgen Titel: RESUME: Hands-on Retrocomputing (Computerarchäologie, Band 1) Taschenbuch – 28. April 2016 ISBN-10: 3897333961 ISBN-13: 978-3897333963 #computermuseum #oldenburg #bremerhaven #ocm Green Secure ist eine Computerfirma aus Bremerhaven. Außer den klassischen EDV bzw. IT Dienstleistungen, bieten wir auch viel zu IT-Sicherheit. Unsere Projekte sind zukunftsweisend und interessant. Newsletter gefällig? Erhalte neue Tipps, Tricks & Geschichten von uns: https://www.green-secure.de/newsletter/ Du hörst Spotify? Hier ist unser Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0E7vPx8cKSuewZL4UZgTyW Du bist bei iTunes? Podcast auch hier: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/green-secure-podcast/id1449020620?mt=2 Abonniere unseren Kanal: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVMYNn06o3uovnnzVQMKG9g?sub_confirmation=1 Website: https://www.green-secure.de Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GreenSecureBHV/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/greensecurebhv/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/GreenSecureGmbH XING: https://www.xing.com/companies/greensecuregmbh Christoph arbeitet seit Anfang der 1990er Jahre mit Computern. Er ist gelernter Fachinformatiker und hat später im Energie- und Umweltbereich ein Ingenieursstudium absolviert. Er hat die Green Secure GmbH gegründet um die Welt in eine neue Richtung zu bringen. Er möchte allen Menschen helfen, im Umgang mit den neuen Medien besser zu werden. Christoph hat Kooperationen mit Schulen und gibt Kurse an der Volkshochschule in Bremerhaven. Außerdem steht er Firmen und Privatleuten stetig beratend zur Seite und hat großen Spaß an Schulungen.
Chocolate milkshake, coffee or liquid gold? If you could have any liquid pour constantly from the tips of your fingers, what would it be? Listen NOW for all the big debates...
Der Tag der Abreise rückt näher, die Planung wird immer detaillierter und wir sind etwas nervös. Andreas war im Computermuseum in Kiel. Unsere Nachbarin wird sich um unsere Meerschweinchen kümmern und hat eingekauft. Im Datenbanken-Teil geht es um die Umwandlung vom E/R- ins relationale Modell und wie man mit SQL Tabellen anlegt.
In this episode of ANTIC The Atari 8-bit Computer Podcast: Bill Lange joins us as a special guest, and he has lots of Atari Pascal news; we have all the Atari news fit to print, and more shows coming in 2019 than you can shake a stick at ... READY! Recurring Links Floppy Days Podcast AtariArchives.org AtariMagazines.com Kevin’s Book “Terrible Nerd” New Atari books scans at archive.org ANTIC feedback at AtariAge Atari interview discussion thread on AtariAge ANTIC Facebook Page AHCS Eaten By a Grue Donate to Ted Nelson project at: https://paypal.me/Savetz TEH: Tech Enthusiast Hour - https://tehpodcast.com What We’ve Been Up To VCF East XIII -- Bill Lange -- Atari 8 Bit Maintenance and Repair https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWkzZr-ZOdo Bill Lange fixed Atari 822 Thermal Printer - https://www.facebook.com/groups/181644898539691/permalink/1963165623720934/ MagFest: A four day/24 hours a day celebration of (M)usic (A)nd (G)ames -National Harbor, MD near Washington D.C. - https://www.magfest.org/ Old School Gamer - Bill Lange Star Raiders Article - https://www.oldschoolgamermagazine.com/magazine/ SDrive Max - http://atariage.com/forums/topic/275629-sdrive-max-atx-support/page-23 Bill Lange notes on SDrive Max: - https://docs.google.com/document/d/1HATTyf5TrxwfdCmRVrT1gOl-XPtCRmzqt9Ulp52C2jg/edit?usp=sharing Computer Animation Primer by David Fox https://www.atariarchives.org/cap/ PASCAL Primer by David Fox https://amzn.to/2Guizdl Bill Lange’s new blog about Pascal: https://insideataripascal.blogspot.com/ Atari Pascal research: https://www.oldschoolgamermagazine.com/magazineosg/osg08/ Kevin’s twitter thread about Atari Pascal documentation: https://twitter.com/KevinSavetz/status/1074036786190401536 Steve Boswell (Mr Robot, @A8bit on twitter) MultiJoy8. The hub was designed by Jan Křupka, he came 5th in the ABBUC hardware contest in 2014 with it. Sails of Doom http://atariage.com/forums/topic/283993-sails-of-doom-new-multijoy-game/ — list of Multijoy games: http://a8.fandal.cz/search.php?search=multijoy&butt_details_x=x Charlie Kulas’ Leafer Madness - code https://archive.org/details/LeaferMadness and discussion http://atariage.com/forums/topic/287589-leafer-madness-by-charlie-kulas/ RespeQT - https://github.com/jzatarski/RespeQt Interviews Philip Bouchard - MECC, The Oregon Trail - http://ataripodcast.libsyn.com/antic-interview-369-philip-bouchard-the-oregon-trail Atari News New season of gameplay on AtariAge - 8-bit High Score Club Season 16 - The Real Bounty Bob - http://atariage.com/forums/forum/60-8-bit-high-score-club/ Atari XL/XE -=Space Fortress Omega=- - Jason Kendall - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CMgWsLjqx8 Space Fortress Omega is a great new vertically scrolling shoot 'em up for the Atari 8-bit computers by Kendallsoft - http://a8.fandal.cz/detail.php?files_id=7659 New Atari news web site: https://atari8bit.net by Steve Boswell (Mr Robot, @A8bit on twitter) LiteDOS 2.0 released https://atari8bit.net/litedos2-0-released/ New game Animal Keeper - www.atarisales.com Mytek’s 1088XLD project - Thread on AA: http://atariage.com/forums/topic/280918-1088xld-custom-a8-computer-in-1050-drive-case/ 10-line BASIC contest is underway http://gkanold.wixsite.com/homeputerium/kopie-von-games-list-2019-2 6502 competition http://6502.atari.org.pl (deadline was January 31, 2019) ANTIC now on TuneIn - http://tun.in/pjiJE - You can listen to ANTIC on your Echo Dot or Spot! Everyone’s favorite Atari emulator for Mac AtariMacX has been updated to 5.0.1 http://www.atarimac.com/ (update 2019-01) (Mojave Dark Mode and minor fixes), Altirra’s current version is 3.10 http://www.virtualdub.org/altirra.html (Updated 2018-08) Atari800 emulator is at 4.0 https://atari800.github.io/index.html (Updated 2018-05) Rainbow v1.5.8 https://www.bannister.org/software/rainbow.htm AKI - Atari Keyboard Interface - https://lotharek.pl/productdetail.php?id=228 AVAILABLE END OF FEBRUARY Sio SPLITTER https://lotharek.pl/productdetail.php?id=158 RetroChallenge 2019/03 is now open. Anyone doing Atari projects out there? - http://www.retrochallenge.org/ Upcoming Shows with Atari Computers VCF Pacific Northwest 2019 will take place March 23-24, 2019 at Living Computers: Museum+Labs in Seattle, Washington. Details can be found at http://www.vcfed.org/vcf-pnw. Midwest Gaming Classic - Milwaukee, WI - April 12-14, 2019 - https://www.midwestgamingclassic.com/ The Great Oz Retro-Fest, (GORF) April 24-28, 2019 - Melbourne, Australia. GORF is a multi-day event celebrating the personal computing platforms of the 1970s, 80s and 90s including the Apple, Microbee, Commodore, Atari, Sinclair and other 8- and 16-bit computer lines. Similar to KansasFest there is bunk-style accommodation provided on-site and participants are encouraged to live-in for the duration of the event. https://www.reddit.com/r/retrocomputing/comments/ar4uvw/gorf_the_great_oz_retrotechnology_festival/ VCFSE 7.0 is scheduled for April 27&28, 2019 in Roswell, GA at the new Computer Museum of America. VCF East May 3-5, InfoAge Science Center, Wall, NJ - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-east/ Fujiama 2019 - Monday, August 26, 2019 to Sunday Sep. 1, 2019 (ONE WHOLE WEEK. Fujiama 2019 will be held at the Schützenhaus, Schützenhausweg 11, 08485 Lengenfeld, Germany. Visit atarixle's Fujiama page, Krupkaj's parties photos or mathy meetings page. VCF Midwest, Elk Grove Village, IL - Sep. 14-15, 2019 - http://vcfmw.org/ Portland Retro Gaming Expo Oct 18-20 http://www.retrogamingexpo.com YouTube Videos Since Last Show Atari 800XL NTSC to PAL Conversion - FlashJazzCat (Jonathan Halliday) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwGtzZzoO0Q Restoring an Atari 800 XL - Atomo Workshop - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QLfS8mqsuI Atari 800XL Extreme Refurb: Revisited new surprise ending! - Perifractic's Retro Recipes - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=au8tCd0-b4k Animal Keeper for Atari 5200 and 8-bit Computers! - Video61 (Lance Ringquist) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2DGnsuRbGc David Fox Book “Computer Animation Primer” examples video: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJwCYsQSziWYUlDBNcWy80g/videos?view_as=subscriber New at Archive.org https://archive.org/details/BASICXAAPXVer5/ allan https://archive.org/details/Atari800SecretWeapon https://archive.org/details/DasAtariSpielebuch https://archive.org/details/6502MachineCodeForBeginners by A. P. Stephenson https://archive.org/details/GettingMoreOutOfYourAtariCrawfordWinnerImages https://archive.org/details/AtariA600XLProductStatusMeetingHandout Possible side effects of listening to the Antic podcast include stuffy nose, sneezing, sore throat; drowsiness, dizziness, feeling nervous; mild nausea, upset stomach, constipation; increased appetite, weight changes; insomnia, decreased sex drive, impotence, or difficulty having an orgasm; dry mouth, intense hate of Commodore, and Amiga lust. Certain conditions apply. Offer good for those with approved credit. Member FDIC. An equal housing lender.
In this episode, Robin and Darren (Growing Up 80s) give a fascinating tutorial on getting started with the Turbo Macro Pro assembler for the Commodore 64, Joseph Kay announces the new Northwest Computer Museum, Music by Kliener'82, Commodore joystick review by Stefan, MBTM Cybersecurity news, 80s nostalgia, listener voicemails and more.
In this week’s show Justin and Andy talk with special guest Tim aka Darkness429 who recently moved from the Twitch Platform to Facebook for Live Video Streaming. We learn about the process in moving between the platforms as well as what motivated Darkness 429 to decide to full time game stream. What’s the reaction from the parents when you tell them; I want to be a professional videogamer. Andy shares his ancientness asking what games did Darkness429 start playing, we do find out which were the games played in his education. Tim shares ways to stay healthy with such a intense full time game streaming schedule with technology such as Sit Down tabletops from Human Scale have helped. What ground breaking technology helped move gamers to the ability to Live Stream. We get some ideas of what brought this to the forefront with products such as OBS Studio and XSplit. We learn about the approach from Facebook and about taking the leap of faith to make it happen. Within 3 months, 115k followers have connected to Darkness429. What are some of the protocols towards the viewers that should be maintained and could help the live streamer build the audience? Gaming over the years has changed and with that the requirements on computer systems has also changed, Darkness429 shares some of the preferences and helps discuss Console vs. PC. Darkness429 has an elaborate setup for both streaming and gaming as we cover everything from monitors to keyboards. We learn about Stream Deck from El Gato and how it enhances the systems as well as other great products from El Gato. We talk input devices from Logitech, Corsair, Steel Series and Razor. For those wanting to game, Build Your Own or a Rack Based System? We learn about Xidax Computers which is a sponsor for Darkness429. In the discussion of processors we talk Intel and AMD and hear goodness about the Ryzan Thread Ripper from AMD. Darkness429 streams using the GoPro platform, how is this done? How important is the audio portion of the Live Stream? We also learn about the Audio control with the Mackie DL806 Wireless Mixer which is controlled by an iPad. Every Podcaster will question the choices on Microphones and we talk about Darkness429’s recent move to Blue Baby Bottle from the Heil PR40, The sound is amazing. Darkness429 discusses the future and what could be the next steps after gaming. Are females venturing into the gaming arena and what are the challenges? We wrap up our discussion as Justin gives him some rapid fire questions such as the First Game Ever played!? Our Website of the Week this Week is the Computer Museum at http://www.old-computers.com Connect with us on our Social Media sites. Facebook Techtalkers http://www.facebook.com/techtalkers Twitter @techtalkradio Instagram techtalkradio
The Intellivision Keyboard Component Hello everyone and welcome to Floppy Days #83 for April, 2018. My name is Randy Kindig and I host this little retrospective on vintage computers. I’m stepping outside the normal timeline for this particular episode in order to cover a vintage gaming console and an upgrade that could be purchased for it that turned it into a home computer. The gaming console is the Intellivision and the upgrade was called the Intellivision Keyboard Component. This system falls roughly into our current timeline, which sits currently at 1980, in that the Intellivision Master Componenet was released in 1979 and the Keyboard Component while work was started on it in 1978 it was never officially released except for about 4,000 units before it was officially canceled in 1982. Paul Nurminen, aka Nurmix, of the Intellivisionaries Podcast, came to me some time ago and suggested that we collaborate on a podcast about this system as he thought it might be interesting to Intellivisionaries and Floppy Days listeners alike. I agreed with him and we set about to pull together information and guests about this gaming/computing machine, code-named the Blue Whale, or whimsically occasionally called the Intelliputer. To that end, Paul was able to contact two gentlemen with intimate knowledge of the keyboard component. The first is Dave Rolfe, who was involved in the development of the keyboard component. The second is Frank Palazzolo, who is working on emulating the keyboard component. Paul will be co-hosting this show with me and we have a lot of information to pass on to you that I hope you find interesting. I’ll first go over a few new acquisitions and upcoming shows and then we’ll jump right into the interview with David, followed by Frank. Links Mentioned in the Show: New Acquisitions Introduction to BASIC Programming, Steven L. Mandell, 1979 - https://www.amazon.com/Introduction-BASIC-Programming-Steven-Mandell/dp/0314680829/ BASIC: A Guide to Structured Programming, Instructor’s Manual by Dwyer, Crutchfield, Shore, and Kaufman, 1985 - https://www.amazon.com/Basic-Structured-Programming-Thomas-Dwyer/dp/0395356539 F18A (TI-99) - http://codehackcreate.com/store#!/F18A-V1-8-Video-Board/p/14022176/category=0 Sofia RGB board for Atari 8-bit - http://atariage.com/forums/topic/258702-new-development-gtia-in-cpld/page-1 CoCo3 RGB to SCART cable - https://boysontech.com/ SCART to HDMI converter box - https://www.ebay.com/itm/Scart-HDMI-to-HDMI-adapter-720-1080P-HD-Video-Converter-Box-for-HDTV-DVD-STB-BH-/183032163582?var=&hash=item2a9d912cfe Upcoming Shows CoCoFest - http://www.glensideccc.com/cocofest/ , April 21-22, HERON POINT CONVENTION CENTER, Lombard, IL VCF Southeast - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/otherevents/vintage-computer-festival-southeast/ , April 21 & 22, 2018, this year at the new location for the Computer Museum of America Roswell, GA TI Fest West - https://www.facebook.com/events/1857301137678595/ - Saturday, April 28 at 10 AM - 5:30 PM PDT, 901 C St, Vancouver, WA Vintage Computer Festival East - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-east/ , When: May 18-20, 2018, Where: InfoAge Science Center, 2201 Marconi Rd., Wall, NJ KansasFest - https://www.kansasfest.org/ , July 17-22, 2018, Kansas City, Missouri VCF West - https://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-west/ , August 4-5, 2018 - Computer History Museum, Mountain View, CA Commodore Vegas Expo v14 - http://www.commodore.ca/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=12676 , Aug. 11-12, 2018, Las Vegas, NV Tandy Assembly - http://www.tandyassembly.com , Nov. 10-11, Springfield, OH Portland Retro Gaming Expo - http://www.retrogamingexpo.com/ - Oregon Convention Center on October 19-21, 2018 other shows that will definitely occur but not yet announced: VCF Midwest - Elk Grove Village, IL - http://www.vcfmw.org/ , September TI International World’s Faire - http://www.chicagotiug.com/ - November World of Commodore - http://www.tpug.ca/ , December - Toronto Interview with Frank Palazzolo Frank Palazzolo - Keyboard Component - Knarfian on AtariAge, frank@avoidspikes.com https://youtu.be/y7QjvgwThFA - Frank on emulating vintage computers http://www.avoidspikes.com/dsplib/intv/index.html - Frank’s Web site Ads Keyboard Component ads - http://www.intvfunhouse.com/gte/cat/ Community Mailing Lists Intellivision programming mailing list - https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/intvprog/info Forums AtariAge - http://atariage.com/forums/forum/125-intellivision-aquarius/ Current Web Sites Keyboard Component information at intellivisionlives.com - http://www.intellivisionlives.com/bluesky/hardware/keyboard_tech.html KC at Intellivision Wiki - http://wiki.intellivision.us/index.php?title=Keyboard_Component Papa Intellivision - http://papaintellivision.com Joe z's website - http://spatula-city.org/~im14u2c/images/kbd/ Mattel Electronics Intellivision Master Component System and Keyboard Component commercial - https://youtu.be/UdveJuwHuGM Intellivision® Keyboard Demonstration Cassette - https://youtu.be/mvsT7ZI4ikU
In this episode of ANTIC The Atari 8-bit Computer Podcast: In our 50th episode, Kevin tells us about all his secret tours, we tell you about upcoming contests, review new books, and read lots of feedback from our listeners. READY! Recurring Links Floppy Days Podcast AtariArchives.org AtariMagazines.com Kevin’s Book “Terrible Nerd” New Atari books scans at archive.org ANTIC feedback at AtariAge Atari interview discussion thread on AtariAge Interview index: here ANTIC Facebook Page AHCS Eaten By a Grue Donate to Ted Nelson project at: https://paypal.me/Savetz TEH: Tech Enthusiast Hour - https://tehpodcast.com What We’ve Been Up To Vintage Computer Festival Pacific Northwest - https://archive.org/details/@savetz?and%5B%5D=Vintage+Computer+Festival+Pacific+Northwest Atari 1020 plotter https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=yAetCgnxYbc Replacement X/Y gears: https://www.shapeways.com/product/CMBQ6D2Z4 LCM tour (Dorsett tapes) - http://www.livingcomputers.org/ Internet Archive visit - http://www.archive.org Theses project - https://archive.org/details/@savetz?and%5B%5D=thesis Dandy source code: https://archive.org/details/Dandy_source REWRITE word processor https://archive.org/details/REWRITE_word_processor Indy Vintage Computer Club - https://www.facebook.com/groups/1082702455167563/ Video enhancement options VBXE - RGB output providing crisp clear picture using LCD TV or RGB monitor - https://lotharek.pl/productdetail.php?id=53 Bryan Edewaard’s UAV (Ultimate Atari Video) board - http://atariage.com/forums/topic/260267-the-uav-rev-d-video-upgrade-thread/ Sofia - http://atariage.com/forums/topic/258702-new-development-gtia-in-cpld/ News 8 BIT ANNUAL book - https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/8bitmagazine/8-bit-annual-2018-for-8-bit-computers-and-consoles If you have an Android device, you can listen to it with a free app InfoMan made called Retro Atari Podcasts - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.andromo.dev5592.app460787&hl=en BASIC Ten-Liners are back for 2018 - http://gkanold.wixsite.com/homeputerium/basic-10liners-2018 ABBUC Software contest - Freetz on AtariAge - http://atariage.com/forums/topic/272415-abbuc-software-competition-2018/ Stunt Car Racer - http://a8.fandal.cz/detail.php?files_id=7541 RetroChallenge 2018/04 - http://www.retrochallenge.org/ That company that calls itself Atari is doing a cryptocurrency - Atari Token - http://fortune.com/2018/02/16/atari-cryptocurrency-atari-token/ The A-Z of Atari 8-bit Games: Volume 2 (The Atari 8-bit) Kindle Edition by Kieren Hawkin - https://www.amazon.com/Z-Atari-8-bit-Games-ebook/dp/B07B7P5CSF Upcoming Shows where you might see Atari computers (or Atari people): VCF Southeast, April 21 & 22, 2018, this year at the Computer Museum of America Roswell, GA Vintage Computer Festival East - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-east/ , When: May 18-20, 2018, Where: InfoAge Science Center, 2201 Marconi Rd., Wall, NJ Southern Fried June 8-10 http://southernfriedgameroomexpo.com KansasFest - https://www.kansasfest.org/ , July 17-22, 2018, Kansas City, Missouri VCF West Aug 4-5 - https://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-west/ Portland Retro Gaming Expo - http://www.retrogamingexpo.com/ - Oregon Convention Center on October 19-21, 2018 other shows that will definitely occur but not yet announced: VCF Midwest - Elk Grove Village, IL - September Atari Party - keep eye open International Atari Shows (Nir Dary) - https://calendar.google.com/calendar/embed?src=io8bv441r87ffratdj1ir2lggs@group.calendar.google.com&pli=1 YouTube videos this month YouTube videos this month - using the search term “Atari 800” Atari 400 vs. Commodore VIC-20 - Round 1 - Fight! - by Retro Systems Rescue - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeOJY9VUkyQ Atari 400 Y/C (S-video) video mod by FlashJazzCat - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WejZHNOMgYU Atari 400 demonstration video tapes by Bill Lange - different resolutions - 5 minute video - shows Programmer, Communicator, Entertainer, Educator 1280 x 720 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE_qS5IEQhQ 1920 x 1080 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B5DpP_-zrck 720 x 480 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3AGOXO4sdM A Word From Our Sponsor ATARI 400 Demonstration Video Tapes - Bill Lange - https://atari8bitads.blogspot.com/2018/03/atari-home-computer-merchandising-aids.html New at Archive.Org https://archive.org/details/Atari810DiskPeripheralDeviceDescription https://archive.org/details/NiteLiteBBS Cosmi's Text Pro II/Data-Pro II manual - https://archive.org/details/TextProDataPro https://archive.org/details/Conflict2500Manual1981 https://archive.org/details/MidiTrackIIIManual https://archive.org/details/atari_800XL_Field_Service_manual_201802 https://archive.org/details/1010CassetteRecorderFieldServiceManual https://archive.org/details/SpaceKnights by david heller dr wacko https://archive.org/details/SummaryOfCommandsCrusadeInEurope https://archive.org/details/Dandy_source End of Show Music MotionRide (Pete) rock version of Disco Dirge - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xa-twkXhXDQ Possible side effects of listening to the Antic podcast include stuffy nose, sneezing, sore throat; drowsiness, dizziness, feeling nervous; mild nausea, upset stomach, constipation; increased appetite, weight changes; insomnia, decreased sex drive, impotence, or difficulty having an orgasm; dry mouth, intense hate of Commodore, and Amiga lust. Certain conditions apply. Offer good for those with approved credit. Member FDIC. An equal housing lender.
The Acorn Atom and the Fifth Year of Floppy Days 1980 was a very prolific year for the development of personal computers around the globe and we continue to cover machines made in that year. This month’s topic is a machine that was never made available in the United States. It was popular in parts of Europe and particularly in the Netherlands. The machine: The Acorn Atom. This is the first non-US machine I’ve covered and I have plans to cover other machines that were made outside of North America. I want to start out by thanking Walter Miraglia and Andy Collins for providing their thoughts and memories of the Acorn Atom. I have zero personal experience with the Atom, never having seen one or even heard of it prior to doing some recent research on non-US personal computers and deciding to cover it. So, it was great to have a couple of people who do have some experience with the machine volunteer to share their memories. To help me cover this machine, I found one of the foremost Atom experts on the forums, Mr. Roland Leurs, out of the Netherlands. He was kind enough to agree to provide his insight and expertise for this show. As you will hear, he knows this computer very well and really helps us understand its nuances. I think you will enjoy the knowledge he shares with us. As usual, I’ll also talk about new acquisitions and what I’ve been up to, a bit of news, and a modicum of feedback before we get into the main topic. Before moving into new acquisitions, I wanted to stop for a moment and reflect on the 5th year anniverary of the show this month. It’s really hard to believe that it’s been 5 years and 82 shows since I first pulled out a microphone and took my first halting steps into podcasting. It’s been a fun ride. The thing that I enjoy the most of anything about doing the podcast is the feedback, comments, emails, and more that I get. Every time someone says hi at a vintage computer show and tells me that they listen to the podcast, it gives me a thrill. When I see an episode get downloaded over 3,000 times, it amazes me. The friends that I’ve gained as a result of this hobby have been incredible. Every person who has come onto the show to help me cover a computer, talk with me for an interview, or provide thoughts and memories has become part of my circle of friends. I consider this a collaborative show. This is not Randy Kindig talking for an hour about a computer. Just about every show has had involvement from others in the community. I want you all to know how much all of those things are appreciated. I can definitively tell you I don’t have any plans to end the podcast any time soon. If it ever quits being fun, then maybe, but you’re stuck with me for a while yet. thank you everyone. Links Mentioned in the Show: New Acquisitions Juiced.GS - https://juiced.gs/ Vintage Game Consoles: An Inside Look at Apple, Atari, Commodore, Nintendo, and the Greatest Gaming Platforms of All Time by Bill Loguidice and Matt Barton - https://www.amazon.com/Vintage-Game-Consoles-Commodore-Platforms/dp/0415856000 Indy Vintage Computer Club - https://www.facebook.com/groups/1082702455167563/ News C64 mini - http://www.techguide.com.au/news/now-can-relive-retro-computing-memories-mini-commodore-64/# Upcoming Shows CoCoFest - http://www.glensideccc.com/cocofest/ , April 21-22, HERON POINT CONVENTION CENTER, Lombard, IL VCF Southeast - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/otherevents/vintage-computer-festival-southeast/ , April 21 & 22, 2018, this year at the new location for the Computer Museum of America Roswell, GA Vintage Computer Festival East - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-east/ , When: May 18-20, 2018, Where: InfoAge Science Center, 2201 Marconi Rd., Wall, NJ KansasFest - https://www.kansasfest.org/ , July 17-22, 2018, Kansas City, Missouri VCF West - https://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-west/ , August 4-5, 2018 - Computer History Museum, Mountain View, CA Commodore Vegas Expo v14 - http://www.commodore.ca/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=12676 , Aug. 11-12, 2018, Las Vegas, NV Tandy Assembly - http://www.tandyassembly.com , Oct. 13-14, Springfield, OH Portland Retro Gaming Expo - http://www.retrogamingexpo.com/ - Oregon Convention Center on October 19-21, 2018 other shows that will definitely occur but not yet announced: VCF Midwest - Elk Grove Village, IL - http://www.vcfmw.org/ , September TI International World’s Faire - http://www.chicagotiug.com/ - November World of Commodore - http://www.tpug.ca/ , December - Toronto Feedback Ken Partridge - pictures from Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA (Facebook and Instagram) - search #floppydayschm Popular Magazines/Newsletters Acorn Programs Magazine - https://archive.org/details/acorn-programs Acorn User - https://archive.org/details/acornuser Books list of books at stardot - http://stardot.org.uk/forums/viewtopic.php?t=6791 Acorn Atom Technical Manual by Roger Wilson (??) - Publisher: Acorn Computers - PDF Scan - Hoglet's 2013 edition Atomic Theory and Practice - Author(s): David Johnson Davies - Publisher: Acorn Computers - PDF Scan - Hoglet's 2013 edition Splitting the Atom - A manual for Informed Users - Author(s): J. R. Stevenson and J. C. Rockett - Publisher: Procyon - HTML Version - PDF Scan Part 1 and PDF Scan Part 2 Practical Programs for the BBC Computer and Acorn Atom - Author(s): David Johnson Davies - ISBN: 0905104145 - Publisher: Sigma Technical Press - Keith Howell's reconstruction Software Atom Software Archive - http://stardot.org.uk/forums/viewtopic.php?t=6544 Here is the latest version of the archive - AtomSoftwareArchive_20151119_V9.zip Here is the latest spreadsheet that details each title, including instructions for running, and links to any scans of original documentation - AtomSoftwareCatalog_20151119_V9.xls Retro Games Collection (Drew Turpin) - https://drewturpin.wordpress.com/category/acorn-atom/ User Groups Dutch Acorn Atom User Group - http://www.acornatom.nl/sites/atominpc/aclindex.htm Emulation Atom in PC - Roland Leurs - http://members.casema.nl/hhaydn/atomhw.html http://floooh.github.io/virtualkc/ Atomulator - http://acornatom.co.uk/ - A free, open source Acorn Atom emulator for Windows, Linux, OSX and Raspberry Pi Acorn Atom Emulator (DOS) - http://www.stairwaytohell.com/atom/wouterras/ Community Forums AtariAge - http://www.atariage.com StarDot Forums - http://www.stardot.org.uk/forums/ 6502.org - http://www.6502.org Current Web Sites Yet Another Computer Museum - https://fjkraan.home.xs4all.nl/comp/atom/index.html Atom Review - http://members.casema.nl/hhaydn/index-uk.html Atom BASIC, Assembler, and the OS - http://members.casema.nl/hhaydn/index-uk.html Acorn Atom in FPGA - http://members.casema.nl/hhaydn/howel/logic/acorn_atom_project.htm The Atom Revisited - http://www.acornatom.nl/ Atom area at YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/AtomsUp/videos Programs for the Atom from AcornSoft - https://fjkraan.home.xs4all.nl/comp/atom/Control_Universal_catalogue_html/Acornsoft/Acornsoft.htm PDF scans and HTML documentation Acorn Atom - http://electrickery.xs4all.nl/comp/atom/doc/index.html Build Your Own Acorn Atom by Roland Leurs - http://diy.acornatom.nl/ A brief history of Acorn home computers, including the Atom - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUnRaldq8PA
In this episode of ANTIC The Atari 8-bit Computer Podcast: In this first episode of 2018, we talk about the fact that ANTIC has been downloaded over ½ million times, we get a surprise visit from Thomas Cherryhomes, who talks about PLATO for the Atari, we offer Atari 8-bit gift options for Valentine’s Day, Nir Dary tells us about some things he’s been exploring, plus all the Atari 8-bit news that we could find. Happy New Year! READY! Recurring Links Floppy Days Podcast AtariArchives.org AtariMagazines.com Kevin’s Book “Terrible Nerd” New Atari books scans at archive.org ANTIC feedback at AtariAge Atari interview discussion thread on AtariAge ANTIC Facebook Page AHCS Eaten By a Grue Donate to Ted Nelson project at: https://paypal.me/Savetz TEH: Tech Enthusiast Hour - https://tehpodcast.com What We’ve Been Up To Laserdisc project - https://archive.org/stream/creativecomputing-1982-01/Creative_Computing_v08_n01_1982_January#page/n92/mode/1up/search/aurora Trans Lux - Trans Lux, Atari 800 art by Hal Glicksman & Trans Lux, an Atari 800 demo by Hal Glicksman Theses - https://archive.org/details/@savetz?and%5B%5D=thesis Vintage Game Consoles: An Inside Look at Apple, Atari, Commodore, Nintendo, and the Greatest Gaming Platforms of All Time by Bill Loguidice and Matt Barton - https://www.amazon.com/Vintage-Game-Consoles-Commodore-Platforms/dp/0415856000 Indy Vintage Computer Club - https://www.facebook.com/groups/1082702455167563/ Interview Discussion Interview index: here News Prototype PLATO cart from Lance at Video61 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsFthVymI4Q Thom & company got the PLATO cart working - http://atariage.com/forums/topic/196354-ataris-plato-cartridge-question/?p=3952844 1984 article about Atari PLATO cart - https://www.atarimagazines.com/v3n3/platorising.html Cyber1 - https://www.cyber1.org Friendly Orange Glow book - http://amzn.to/2E0ZWsN Demo video by Thomas Cherryhomes - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4B4DjFT8U8 8-bit High Score Club Season 15 - http://atariage.com/forums/forum/60-8-bit-high-score-club/ Altirra 3.00 out - http://www.virtualdub.org/altirra.html BASIC Ten-Liners are back for 2018 - http://gkanold.wixsite.com/homeputerium/basic-10liners-2018 13th Issue of Pro(c) Magazine - https://proc-atari.de/de/proc-atari-magazin Cult game Pong bounces back as quiz show - https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/cult-game-pong-bounces-back-as-quiz-show-f7ht0dc2w Upcoming Shows where you might see Atari computers (or Atari people): Vintage Computer Festival Pacific Northwest - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-pacific-northwest/ , When: Saturday February 10th and Sunday February 11th, 2018, Where: Living Computers: Museum+Labs, 2245 First Avenue South, Seattle, WA VCF Southeast, April 21 & 22, 2018, this year at the Computer Museum of America Roswell, GA Vintage Computer Festival East - http://vcfed.org/wp/festivals/vintage-computer-festival-east/ , When: May 18-20, 2018, Where: InfoAge Science Center, 2201 Marconi Rd., Wall, NJ KansasFest - https://www.kansasfest.org/ , July 17-22, 2018, Kansas City, Missouri Portland Retro Gaming Expo - http://www.retrogamingexpo.com/ - Oregon Convention Center on October 19-21, 2018 other shows that will definitely occur but not yet announced: VCF Midwest - Elk Grove Village, IL - September Atari Party - keep eye open International Atari Shows (Nir Dary) - https://calendar.google.com/calendar/embed?src=io8bv441r87ffratdj1ir2lggs@group.calendar.google.com&pli=1 YouTube videos this month YouTube videos this month - using the search term “Atari 800” Mister FPGA Board Emulating ATARI 800 XL Computer (Nir Dary) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GRitIyId5Ws - Mister is an open source FPGA Retro machine emulation system, in this Video i demonstrate the Mister board emulating the ATARI 800 XL computer Trans Lux, an Atari 800 demo by Hal Glicksman uploaded by Kevin Savetz - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2aa_DkAcmdc&t=228s Atari 800/400 "E.R.I.C. P.O.P. #1" Kiosk Video Rip - Ben Henmueller - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-Ajm0RweL0 - This video was ripped from a laserdisc that was used in kiosks set-up by Atari to promote the Atari 800 and Atari 400 computer systems. My 1983 Diary Episode 3: More Atari Games and Pelham Puppets - JohnnyCeed - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJ_Ybu8nDlM Valentine’s Day Gift Ideas Atari T-shirts at Target - https://www.target.com/s?searchTerm=atari CB101280E2 Atari Enhanced 2nd Generation Custom made Composite Video Cable - Best Electronics - http://www.best-electronics-ca.com/Atari%20CV%20E2%20cable.htm Controllers at Best Electronics - http://www.best-electronics-ca.com/quickguide.htm Replace your Atari ingot power supply https://twitter.com/blakespot/status/946527186344988672 Identify the ingot - http://atariage.com/forums/topic/95416-power-supplies/?p=1157349 Replacement power supply $20 - $27 at Best Electronics - http://www.best-electronics-ca.com/power%20guide.htm Atari 1088XEL by MacRorie http://ataribits.weebly.com/1088xel.html http://atariage.com/forums/topic/271135-1088xel-atari-itx-motherboard-pre-order-interest-thread/ Atari 1050 Drive SD Card Reader $80 - https://www.etsy.com/listing/217822136/atari-1050-drive-sd-card-reader?ref=shop_home_active_19 Atari 800XL Brushed Aluminum Badge $4.29 - https://www.etsy.com/listing/448890934/atari-800-xl-label-logo-sticker-badge?ref=shop_home_active_25 Atari 800 Embroidered Custom Dust cover $19.50 - https://www.etsy.com/listing/548440655/atari-800-computer-custom-made-dustcover?ref=shop_home_active_20 Breakout Book $17.99 - https://www.amazon.com/Breakout-Atari-Computers-Defined-Generation/dp/0692851275/ Nir’s Segment - SilliVenture 2017 http://8bit-slicks.com/ https://github.com/MiSTer-devel/Main_MiSTer/wiki http://atariage.com/forums/topic/260646-new-hardware-atari-400800-super-color-cpu-card/ Possible side effects of listening to the Antic podcast include stuffy nose, sneezing, sore throat; drowsiness, dizziness, feeling nervous; mild nausea, upset stomach, constipation; increased appetite, weight changes; insomnia, decreased sex drive, impotence, or difficulty having an orgasm; dry mouth, intense hate of Commodore, and Amiga lust. Certain conditions apply. Offer good for those with approved credit. Member FDIC. An equal housing lender.
According to a Toronto Star article, three nursing homes have been told that they're no longer allowed to accept new residents due to sub-standard care. Sometimes this happens because of people turning a blind-eye and sometimes it's because of budgetary concerns. Whatever the reason, you don't want your parents or relatives to suffer, do you? Guest: Sivan Tumarkin, Head of Personal Injury and Insurance Law practice group at Samfiru Tumarkin LLP-The Ticats are facing the Winnigpeg Blue Bombers tomorrow and if the past is any indicator for the Ticats, things won't go well, or will they? Rick Zamperin joins Scott to talk about how they think tomorrow's game will go as well as the future of the Ticats' coaching roster. Guest: Rick Zamperin, Senior Sports Director at 900 CHML-Computers have been around for only a decade or two but they have revolutionized the world. They're constantly being improved and when you buy the newest model, it seems like a newer one has been released. This makes curating a museum of personal computers incredibly challenging but Syd Bolton has done it! Do you remember your first computer? Guest: Syd Bolton, Curator of the Personal Computer Museum
Sogenannte Q&A-Communities wie Quora oder GuteFrage.net haben eine riesen Reichweite, doch mit der Antwortqualität gibt es ab und an Herausforderungen. Quora setzt nun KI-Technologie ein, um das zu verbessern. +viele News, z.B. Kim Dotcoms Doku im Kino.
James and John discuss eBay finds: Apple poster, $2B goblet set, glass coaster, and wooden Apple lobby sign. David Greelish updates us on the Computer Museum of America, and news includes WWDC. To see all of the show notes and join our website, visit us at RetroMacCast
032916 Mimms
James and John discuss eBay finds: 5-year poster, Apple decals, and users group souvenir. Adam Rosen interviews Syd Bolton from The Computer Museum, and news includes Golden Globes, Oscar nominations, and KansasFest keynote announcement. To see all of the show notes and join our website, visit us at RetroMacCast
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we jump into a discussion on accepting equity as part of your pay as developer. We discuss the risk and the rewards. That leads into a brief discussion of Canadian and US economies. We discuss the Apple Tv after using it for few months as well as Mark's impressions on the Apple TV Tech Talks. We discuss what is using Swift correctly and what to do with old Macs. Picks: Zync, icons8, Lynda.com and Programming iOS 9 and GamePlayKit by Tammy Coron. Episode 71 Show Notes: When a Unicorn Start-Up Stumbles, Its Employees Get Hurt RSU TAM Broadway Leads formerly iOS Leads W8BEN George W. Bush Cold Open - SNL (US Only) Apple TV Tech Talks - Session Resources Plex App Marathon Alto's Adventure Badland Does not Commute Luther Season 4 NSCoderTO Tammy Coron Roundaboutfm Podcast Simon Allardice Scott Gardner Lynda.com Toronto Public Library - Lynda Complete Free IOS 9 , Xcode 7 and Swift 2.0 Development Course Switching Your Brain to Swift Advanced Swift Perfect.org NSDate Computer History Museum The Computer Museum, Boston Swift 2.0 Essential Training Episode 71 Picks: Zinc - Video Bookmarks icons8 Programming iOS 9 and GamePlayKit by Tammy Coron
Im weltgrößten Computermuseum, dem "Heinz Nixdorf Museumsforum" in Paderborn, begleitet uns Andreas Stolte durch die Dauerausstellung. Er ist seit der Gründung vor über 20 Jahren im Museum angestellt und führt uns zum Schachtürken, zu der Enigma, dem Apple I, dem ENIAC und zu vielen weiteren Computern, Robotern und Maschinen.
Hello, welcome to Floppy Days Episode #15. This is a bonus episode and the topic of this show is the upcoming (as of this podcast) 2014 Vintage Computer Festival Southeast 2.0 near Atlanta Georgia on May 3rd and 4th. I interview Lonnie Mimms and Flash Corliss about the show and they give you the highlights about what you can expect to see there. I hope you enjoy it. VCFSE 2.0 - http://www.vintage.org/2014/southeast/ Computer Museum of America - http://www.computermuseumofamerica.com/ VCFSE 2.0 Kickstarter - https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/20859909/help-fund-the-vintage-computer-festival-southeast?ref=live Atlanta Historical Computing Society - http://atlhcs.org/
New podcasts, upcoming vintage computer shows, new additions to my vintage computer collection, listener feedback, my stories about the American Computer Museum, and an interview with George Keremedjiev (director of the American Computer Museum) Links mentioned in the show: ANTIC The Atari 8-bit Podcast - https://ataripodcast.libsyn.com/ Next Without For Podcast (Earl Evans) -http://www.cyberears.com/podcasts/podcast_6066.xml Chicken Lips Radio Podcast (Earl Evans) -http://www.cyberears.com/podcasts/podcast_6067.xml 2013 KansasFest - http://www.kansasfest.org/ 2013 Commodore Vegas Expo - http://www.portcommodore.com/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=commvex:start 2013 Vintage Computer Festival Midwest 8.0 - http://vcfmw.org/ 2013 Chicago TI International World Faire - http://www.chicagotiug.com/tiki-index.php?page=Faire Indiana Computer Museum on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/IndianaComputerMuseum?hc_location=stream Indiana Computer Museum Indiegogo Campaign - http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/indiana-computer-museum/ Apple II History Websiste - http://apple2history.org/ Book “ Sophistication & Simplicity: The Life & Times of the Apple II Computer" by Steven Weyhrich - http://www.amazon.com/Sophistication-Simplicity-Times-Apple-Computer/dp/0986832278 MyTechBrief - http://www.mytechbrief.com/hardware/vintage-computers American Computer Museum - http://www.compustory.com/ American Computer Museum - http://www.compuseum.org/ American Computer Museum at Bozemannet.com - http://www.bozemannet.com/history_museums/computer_robotics_museum.php Forbes Interview with George Keremedjiev Concerning an Apple 1 Auction - http://www.forbes.com/sites/lynndouglass/2013/06/24/first-apple-computer-expected-to-sell-for-at-least-500000/
The advent of personal computing devices such as PCs and smart phones with terabyte storage has enable the capture, recording and recall of everything a person reads, writes and hears. These are the new records and artifacts of the 21st century digital person. Since 1998 Gordon Bell of Microsoft Research has worked on MyLifeBits, a system to digitally store everything in a person's life, including accumulated and current articles, books, correspondence, financial and legal records, memorabilia, photos, telephone calls, time-lapse photos, video and web pages. MyLifeBits is both an experiment in lifetime storage and a software research effort. For archivists, exponentially increasing amounts of personal digital artifacts will soon arrive seeking immortality at the portals of museums and libraries, providing a new challenge to institutions accustomed to dealing with an analog person's boxes of papers and memorabilia of past millennia. Organizing, retrieving, preserving and protecting these fleeting, bit-based artifacts over the long-term is the contemporary archivist's greatest challenge. Bell's talk touched on the project's history and discussed the research challenges and the wide-ranging social and personal benefits of the MyLifeBits technology, especially as it pertains to cultural memory institutions. Speaker Biography: Gordon Bell spent 23 years (1960-1983) at Digital Equipment Corporation as Vice President of Research and Development, where he was responsible for Digital's products. He was the architect of various mini- and time-sharing computers (e.g. the PDP-6) and led the development of DEC's VAX and the VAX Computing Environment. Bell has been involved in, or responsible for, the design of many products at Digital, Encore, Ardent, and a score of other companies. He has been involved in the design of about 30 multiprocessors. He is a founding board member of The Computer History Museum at 1401 Shoreline, Mountain View, CA, established in 1999. The museum's world-class artifact collection came from the former Computer Museum, Boston that he co-founded, 1979 with Gwen Bell that originated in 1975 with the now deceased Digital Equipment Corporation that became part of HP in the lat2 1990s. He became a fellow of the Museum on 22 October 2003.