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floppy-diskette · 2 years
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Toshiba Satellite T1960CT back in fighting form, running Windows 95
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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There were actually a lot of PDAs that cropped up throughout the 80s and 90s, though by the time the Palm III series was out in the late 90s the market became increasingly PalmOS dominated, right through to the arrival of the first smartphones and the end of the mainstream PDA era.
…well, as much as the PDA ever was mainstream. They remained expensive enough and limited enough that your average person probably wouldn’t have felt like shelling out hundreds of dollars for one, leaving them mostly to tech enthusiasts and corporate drones.
The early PalmOS models were probably the most accessible (that is, relatively inexpensive) PDAs, and spawned the largest third party software market, so that’s probably why they seemingly quickly ran out competitors…and there really is something to the III series, as far as how they looked and felt.
They were the perfect size and shape to hold comfortably in your hand, and the stylus input was–believe it or not–really great, at the time. The graffiti text input method seems super weird today, but back then it was a good solution to the text input problem. Many other PDAs either had clamshell cases that revealed a QWERTY keyboard (some more usable than others), or used on-screen keyboards or other tedious methods of data entry.
Plus, they used a fairly intuitive system for accessing menus and launching programs, making the learning curve for its intended audience pretty minor, aside from mastering graffiti.
Anyway I have a soft spot for the III series specifically…there were many better PalmOS devices (made by Sony, for the most part), but there’s just something about those III series devices that made them like, the iconic 90s PDA to me.
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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Screenshots from the AvantGo promotional webpages bundled with the Palm IIIxe software CD.
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Panasonic KX-P4420  PC Mag May 1990
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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Living Computers Museum + Labs is closing, pulling the plug on some of the only working vintage computers remaining today.
But for the next week or so, you can still access some mainframes, supercomputers, minicomputers -- and their BBS! -- remotely:
OR https://ssh.livingcomputers.org:4443
More info on https://wiki.livingcomputers.org/doku.php
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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The Debut of the ContrAlto
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Home computing was spreading quickly in the early 1980s. Such historic computers as the Apple ][, Commodore 64, and IBM PC had already been released. However, with the debut of the Macintosh in 1984, things took another leap towards ubiquity as the vast majority of users were introduced to features like the graphical user interface (GUI) and “what you see is what you get” (WYSIWYG) document editing. Microsoft released Windows 1.0 shortly after and later versions would eventually become the dominant home/office GUI. Computing history buffs know that these features started well before Apple and Microsoft were involved, though. It really entered the personal computing space with the creation of the Xerox Alto, the machine that inspired the creation of the Mac and Windows. The Alto was not sold commercially, but a who’s who of computing history names like Charles P. Thacker, Alan Kay, Adele Goldberg, Charles Simonyi and many more, worked on the Alto or its software at Xerox’s Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). Living Computers: Museum + Labs has maintained a working (barring a few occasional repair periods) Xerox Alto for guest use. The purpose is to show off a computer that used features that shaped later machines- GUI, WYSIWYG, the mouse, object-oriented programming- yet was created over a decade prior to the Mac and even before the less sophisticated home machines of the ‘70s and early ‘80s. That didn’t satisfy our team fully, as there was another huge innovation that took place during Alto development- Ethernet networking. Since we had another Alto, our collection held the first key to displaying that innovation in our museum. After the second Alto was restored by LCM+L’s Engineers, the machines were hooked up, allowing visitors to communicate and (more importantly!) play Maze War against one another. However, our Engineering Team wasn’t done there. We wanted to do something in line with the original purpose of the museum (originating in the PDP Planet era) make this system accessible online. Unlike most of our other online systems, we wanted to make something different. Senior Vintage Software Developer Josh Dersch created an emulator for the Alto, and LCM+L founder Paul Allen introduced it to the world on August 2, 2016. ContrAlto allows you to not only emulate an Alto, but network with Altos and ContrAlto emulators via a 3mb Ethernet bridge created and housed here at LCM+L. We released ContrAlto and the source code on our GitHub account, and encourage users to make it better. We also took ContrAlto to the Vintage Computer Festival West to show it off to the kinds of people who would appreciate it the most. As LCM+L grows into a hub for all types of computing technology, guests are sure to look to history for inspiration like Allen, Bill Gates, and Steve Jobs did with the Alto. There are many examples in this museum of concepts that were ahead of their time, or close to ready but missing an element, only to reemerge later as something commercially successful. It is with the perspective that computing builds upon itself that we highlight working examples of historic machines. Enabling visitors to interact with networked Xerox Altos within our walls, and with ContrAlto emulators from a distance, is one way to keep the past as a living inspiration.
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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From the Archives
Keep reading
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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Seiko Tv Watch, Tv commercial using Octopussy footages with Roger Moore (1983)
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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A recent acquisition. Should prove interesting!
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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HF6 Abandoned Powerpant Belgium
Check out the link for the full set from here…
HF6 Powerplant
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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During the 1918 flu epidemic, some companies weren’t shy about pushing their services with quarantine-related messaging. The Central Union Telephone Co., part of the national Bell System of telephone providers led by AT&T, touted the telephone as a way for people in quarantine to feel less isolated and to get “cheer and encouragement” from friends. 
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floppy-diskette · 4 years
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That’s a nice Wang
System Source Computer Museum - Hunt Valley, MD
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