At the Vintage Computer Festival, checking out some early emoji.pic.twitter.com/o3aXBvhC3i – at Computer History Museum
Writing a book about the history of keyboards: http://aresluna.org/shift-happens · Design manager @figmadesign · Typographer · Occasional speaker · He/him
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At the Vintage Computer Festival, checking out some early emoji.pic.twitter.com/o3aXBvhC3i – at Computer History Museum
For this “portable computer” ad from 1975 they found the biggest guy ever, at 6'6". (The computer weighs 50+ lbs.)pic.twitter.com/cIAXevJWhw
The inimitable @timhwang playing Adventure on the classic IBM PC.pic.twitter.com/8krSBEHUJa
Some of us are trying to figure out how to operate some Soviet computers.pic.twitter.com/ENIeUlANje – at Computer History Museum
Four-player Maze War from 1974 on an emulated Alto, courtesy of @LivingComputers!pic.twitter.com/rzZtBNDneT – at Computer History Museum
Undoubtedly one of the most important keys to put on a computer keyboard.pic.twitter.com/44rBCDcYhC
Holy shit! Data General One. One of the most beautiful machines ever. I still have a framed poster of it, somewhere.pic.twitter.com/W4MX5Sqwyo
An *incredible* computerized Monopoly, running on a Z80 microcomputer.pic.twitter.com/6CDT22KIFo – at Computer History Museum
More photos of Monopoly, including its creator. This thing is incredible. Custom Miller buttons to resemble IBM’s!pic.twitter.com/vVwrn3SvOr
Writing my first program on an HP85 from 1980.pic.twitter.com/fhxgQFE5RE – at Computer History Museum
Look at this stack of programs on punch cards. The lines help when you drop cards and you need to resort them.pic.twitter.com/u2ftw0HvVo
Amiga 1000 serial number 1 with the famous ball demo on the screen, and signatures of its makers on the case.pic.twitter.com/qFi28x2hAf – at Computer History Museum
This computer went into space. Any questions?pic.twitter.com/DnVX2FfADS – at Computer History Museum
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