From the Archives

Get a curated tour of CHM’s extensive media holdings. Hear early lectures and talks given by computing pioneers like Konrad Zuse and Harry Huskey and interviews with some of technology's most influential and creative people like Pixar cofounder Ed Catmull and Cisco cofounder Sandra Lerner. Discover something new From the Archives.

Arnold Spielberg: Point-of-Sales and Real-time Computing

Arnold Spielberg is renowned for his work on machines like the RCA BIZMAC and the GE-225 for General Electric. In one of the Museum's earliest oral histories, Gardner Hendrie interviews Spielberg about his work in real-time and point-of-sales systems. Image: © General ElectricCatalog Record: Oral History of Arnold Spielberg

02-28
28:30

Ivan Sutherland: “Virtual Reality before It Had that Name”

Ivan Sutherland is often referred to as the “Father of Computer Graphics.” His work at Harvard, MIT, the University of Utah, and DARPA aided the development of networking, graphics, virtual reality, and robotics technologies. In this 1996 lecture “Virtual Reality before It Had that Name,” Sutherland describes his time at Harvard and the initial steps toward early virtual reality systems.

02-12
25:01

Danny Hillis: Connection Machines

Danny Hillis, inventor and cofounder of Thinking Machines Corporation, designed the Connection Machine series of supercomputers. In this 1991 lecture, Hillis describes the development path for the Connection Machines and the design considerations for the Connection Machine 5 supercomputer. What’s that sound? The sounds of Hillis writing on a chalkboard as he shares his design concepts are captured as part of this recording. Image: Courtesy of Tamiko Thiel

01-22
19:06

Grace Morton: Computers and Poetry

Computer programmer and Grolier Award–winning poet Grace Morton presents a talk and demo on computer poetry as a part of the Bits + Bites lectures at the Boston Computer Museum in 1983. Morton uses a TRS-80 computer to create poetry, both generative and interactive forms, with participation from the audience.

01-08
19:19

Seymour Cray: “What's All This about Gallium Arsenide?” (Part 2)

Seymour Cray is often referred to as the “Father of Supercomputing.” In part two of his 1988 lecture “What's All This about Gallium Arsenide?,” Cray continues his talk on the use of gallium arsenide in his Cray-3 and Cray-4 supercomputer designs and how the compound could change the course of computer design. Image: © Cray Computer Corporation. Collection of the Computer History Museum,102618665.

12-18
25:40

Grace Hopper: Howard Aiken, the Harvard Mark I and the First Bug

Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper's career in computer science began in the 1940s. Her work with early computers, including the Harvard Mark I, led to ground-breaking and fundamental advances in computer science. Here, Hopper discusses her work with Howard Aiken and the Mark-I computer in a 1983 lecture at the Boston Computer Museum. Image: Photo by Carolyn Sweeny. Collection of the Computer History Museum, 102630706.

12-04
19:05

Seymour Cray: “What's All This about Gallium Arsenide?” (Part 1)

Seymour Cray is often referred to as the “Father of Supercomputing.” In part one of his 1988 lecture “What's All This about Gallium Arsenide?,” Cray talks about the use of gallium arsenide in his Cray-3 and Cray-4 supercomputer designs and how the compound could change the course of computer design.Image: © Cray Computer Corporation. Collection of the Computer History Museum,102685990.

11-20
21:17

Electronic Music Pioneer Suzanne Ciani

Suzanne Ciani is a Grammy-nominated musician, composer, and sound designer whose career has spanned more than 40 years. Here, she discusses her work with the Buchla synthesizers, designing audio logos for various companies, and how she carved a place for herself in the early days of American electronic music.Image: © Suzanne Ciani

10-02
17:11

Atari Cofounder Ted Dabney

In his 2012 oral history, engineer and Atari cofounder Samuel F. “Ted” Dabney discusses his work with Nolan Bushnell and the early days of Atari, including the development of the arcade game Pong. Dabney passed away on May 26, 2018.Image: © Allan Alcorn

09-18
22:34

Designer, Entrepreneur and CEO Evelyn Berezin (Part 2)

Evelyn Berezin was born in the Bronx, New York, in 1925. She received her bachelor’s degree in physics in 1945 from NYU, followed by an Atomic Energy Commission fellowship for graduate study in 1946. In 1962 Evelyn Berezin built a reservations system for United Airlines, one of the largest computer systems built at the time. In 1969 she founded and served as CEO of Redactron, a new maker of word processors. In the second part of this two-part series, Berezin discusses the challenges of being a woman systems designer in the male-dominated world of the 1960s, as well as her work designing a digital computer for a horse-racing track.

09-04
16:28

Roads Not Taken: The iPhone’s Software Stack

Hansen Hsu, curator for the Software History Center, explores the software development kit that almost wasn’t and the choices that enabled Apple’s App Store to spawn a worldwide app economy. This episode features clips from a number of public panels and oral histories, including original iPhone UIKit team manager Nitin Ganatra, radio software engineer Andy Gringion, and WebKit manager Richard Williamson.Image © Apple

08-21
22:31

Designer, Entrepreneur and CEO Evelyn Berezin (Part 1)

Evelyn Berezin was born in the Bronx, New York, in 1925. She received her bachelor’s degree in physics in 1945 from New York University, followed by an Atomic Energy Commission fellowship for graduate study in 1946. In 1962 Berezin built a reservations system for United Airlines, one of the largest computer systems built at the time. In 1969 she founded and served as CEO of Redactron, a new maker of word processors. Part one of two focuses on Berezin’s education and early work.

08-07
29:40

Henry Tropp “The 1940s: The First Personal Computer Era” (Part 2)

Henry Tropp, a professor of mathematics at Humboldt State University, was one of the speakers at the first West Coast Computer Faire's Saturday night banquet in 1977. This episode captures part two of his talk, “The 1940s: The First Personal Computer Era,” focusing on the developments in the late 1940s in the UK and the US and the ties between computer designers, especially in software development.

07-24
17:21

Henry Tropp “The 1940s: The First Personal Computer Era” (Part 1)

Henry Tropp, a professor of mathematics at Humboldt State University, was a speaker at the first West Coast Computer Faire's Saturday night banquet in 1977. This episode captures part one of his talk, “The 1940s: The First Personal Computer Era,” covering the origins of digital computing through 1947 and the ways in which it paralleled the microcomputer revolution of the 1970s.Image: Digibarn

07-10
22:26

Richard Shoup and SuperPaint

Richard Shoup (1943−2015) won an Emmy and a Technical Oscar for his foundational work in computer graphics and the development of the early graphics system, SuperPaint. The system created graphics for projects as diverse as NASA's Pioneer Venus program and children's television programs on San Francisco's KQED. This lecture by Shoup was recorded in January 2000.

06-26
25:42

Harry Huskey, Early Computers and SWAC

In the debut of From the Archives, we hear Computer History Museum Fellow Harry Huskey (1916-2017) in a rare 1976 recording discussing his work on early computers, including designing the Standards Western Automatic Computer (SWAC).

06-12
22:59

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