Liste des Groupes | Revenir à rf cooking |
On Mon, 16 Dec 2024 19:41:25 +0000, clams casino wrote:Won't be long till the kinfolks will be hauling all yoose google shit to da dump, Uncle.>Relics of a past age are interesting. My father-in-law had many. Most of
Buried right here:
>
https://denvergazette.com/life/in-boulders-underground-media-archaeology-lab-a-search-for-tech-reckoning/article_72d92d3d-c7c9-5038-8579-b2f3c542d9ba.html >
>
The lab is overseen by a young, tattooed, dyed-haired scholar who does
not like capital letters. It was libi rose striegl who made me aware of
the terms âtechno-pessimist and âtechno-optimist.â
>
âThe computer will save us or weâre totally doomed,â striegl said. âAnd
somewhere in the middle is the reality.â
>
The manager of the Media Archaeology Lab (the MAL) lives in the middle.
She calls herself âagnosticâ when it comes to technology, while also
confessing to screen time amounting to adoration.
>
Instagram shows the clunky array of extinct machines that are kept in
working order here. Yes, to step into the MAL is to step into a time
capsule.
>
The PDP-8 among other computers, including the Apple lineage. The TRS-80
Model 100 among âlaptopsâ of the day. The Walkman among portable music
players and the 1913 phonograph among larger ones.
>
The brick-sized IBM Simon among early cellphones. Among radios is the
Panosonic that flips up a TV screen. The handheld Blip is among
forgotten video games.
>
https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/denvergazette.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/1/1e/11eb35ec-2917-579e-adf5-b46688615c26/6750c1c5ab424.image.jpg?resize=744%2C500 >
them, we just hauled to the dump when he died. I kept some of his
keyboards and drives. He had an awesome board which was about 18 inches
long and had 1MB of memory. It had a letter from the company that was
also his receipt. Back then, it cost $1000.00. I have no idea how you'd
get something that long to fit in a computer.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.