The Computer Museum History Center, Moffett Field, California.
Paul Pierce's Computer Collection
The Virtual Museum of Computing (VMoC) is a joint project is being established between South Bank University and Warwick University in the UK.
Computer History Links by Warren Young.
European Museum on Computer Science and Technology, Russia and Ukraine.
Uncle Roger's Classic Computers
The Obsolete Computer Museum in Williamsburg VA is worth a visit.
A collection of photographs from the Information Age exhibit at the National Museum of Amercan History.
The (Army) History of Computing Information
by Mike Muuss, ARL.
The Yahoo listing of Computers/History
CalTech archives
contain a searchable collection of photographs in which I was able to locate
one computer and two calculator images. Perhaps you can find more!
A remarkable, but still incomplete listing of every
(?) computer type ever built can be found from other links, but I have
pulled it out here since it is so useful. I would suggest that anyone who
can provide more accurate dates on the introduction of these machine contact
the author.
A set of historic computer images, collected by Mike Muuss, is available
at http://ftp.arl.mil/ftp/historic-computers/
Chronology
of Events in the History of Microcomputers by Ken Polsson.
The home page of Hal Layer, San Francisco State University, contains links
to his collection
of classic computers, classic video games, and landmark calculators,
updated continually. Hal calls this the "Mind Machine Web Museum".
The History of the Development of Parallel Computing by Gregory V. Wilson,
a chronological listing Parallel
The Retrocomputing
Museum is an interesting on-line collection of programming language
software.
An on-line museum related to the Unusual
Systems Collection is now available. This page also contains links
to several other pages related to the history of computing.
Virtual
Library for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, located
in Australia has some interesting links, including one to a listing of
"firsts".
Like any other list, I can find faults with it, but it may be useful.
The Virtual
Museum of Computing at Oxford University contains a wealth of information
and links.
(repeated link) The National
Archive for the History of Computing at the University of Manchester
(UK) has information about the Manchester Mark I machine, as well as connections
to other items in their archive.
The Los Alamos National Laboratory has posted a "History
of Modern Computing in General" that has a brief overview of the
work of Zuse, Eckert and Mauchly, and even briefer descriptions of machines
that were installed at the laboratory.
Museu Virtual da Informática, Portugal.
Last updated 2001年12月17日
© J.A.N. Lee, 1998-2001.