Difference between revisions of "Living Computer Museum"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Change tense)
(The Interim Computer Museum will be taking over much of the LCM's collection)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
The '''Living Computer Museum''' (formal name '''Living Computers: Museum + Labs''') was an institution in Seattle, Washington whose goal was to help people understand computing technology, particularly the historic computers which led to today's computers, by experiencing that actual, original, technology first-hand. Towards that goal, they proudly reckoned to have "the world's largest collection of fully-restored - and useable - [[supercomputer]]s, [[mainframe]]s, [[minicomputer]]s and [[microcomputer]]s" (several of them one-of-a-kind survivors).
 
The '''Living Computer Museum''' (formal name '''Living Computers: Museum + Labs''') was an institution in Seattle, Washington whose goal was to help people understand computing technology, particularly the historic computers which led to today's computers, by experiencing that actual, original, technology first-hand. Towards that goal, they proudly reckoned to have "the world's largest collection of fully-restored - and useable - [[supercomputer]]s, [[mainframe]]s, [[minicomputer]]s and [[microcomputer]]s" (several of them one-of-a-kind survivors).
  
It was originally started by Paul Allen (one of the founders of [[Microsoft]]) in 1997, and opened to the public in 2012 (with its machines accessible both in person, at their facility, as well as remotely, over the [[Internet]]). It quickly grew into one of the two premier computer museums in the USA. After the death of Mr. Allen, and the start of the COVID pandemic, it unfortunately suspended operations. In June, 2024, it was announced that it would be shut down, and the collection sold off.
+
It was originally started by Paul Allen (one of the founders of [[Microsoft]]) in 1997, and opened to the public in 2012 (with its machines accessible both in person, at their facility, as well as remotely, over the [[Internet]]). It quickly grew into one of the two premier computer museums in the USA. After the death of Mr. Allen, and the start of the COVID pandemic, it unfortunately suspended operations. In June, 2024, it was announced that it would be shut down, and Mr. Allen's collection (which had been on permanent loan to the LCM) sold off. Much of the LCM's collection has been taken over by a newly-formed institution, the [[Interim Computer Museum]].
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Latest revision as of 16:43, 2 August 2024

The Living Computer Museum (formal name Living Computers: Museum + Labs) was an institution in Seattle, Washington whose goal was to help people understand computing technology, particularly the historic computers which led to today's computers, by experiencing that actual, original, technology first-hand. Towards that goal, they proudly reckoned to have "the world's largest collection of fully-restored - and useable - supercomputers, mainframes, minicomputers and microcomputers" (several of them one-of-a-kind survivors).

It was originally started by Paul Allen (one of the founders of Microsoft) in 1997, and opened to the public in 2012 (with its machines accessible both in person, at their facility, as well as remotely, over the Internet). It quickly grew into one of the two premier computer museums in the USA. After the death of Mr. Allen, and the start of the COVID pandemic, it unfortunately suspended operations. In June, 2024, it was announced that it would be shut down, and Mr. Allen's collection (which had been on permanent loan to the LCM) sold off. Much of the LCM's collection has been taken over by a newly-formed institution, the Interim Computer Museum.

See also

External links