Vintage Computer Festival - Friday Talks
The first day of the Vintage Computer Festival saw a terrific line-up of speakers. Recordings of each talk are available below. There are more speakers tomorrow, so check back Saturday night or join us at Sun's Burlington Campus to attend them live.
Atari 7800 20th Anniversary
Curt Vendel and Steve Golson take a look back at an incredible game console. The Atari 7800 was slated for original release in June of 1984 despite the lackluster videogaming market. But due to a change in management at Atari, the console was delayed by two years and wasn't introduced to market until 1986. This restrospective looks back at the development and evolution of this game console that, for 1984, was far ahead of its time.
VCF Ramblings
Sellam fills everyone in on the latest happenings at the Vintage Computer Festival, including future events and interesting projects, plus the status of the Vintage Computer Festival Archives.
Preserving Computing's Past Through Simulation
SIMH is the Computer History Simulation Project, an Internet-based collective aimed at preserving computing's heritage by simulating systems of historic interest. Started in 1993, the project now encompasses more than 20 systems, including the DEC PDP-1, PDP-4/7/9/15, PDP-8, PDP-11, and VAX; the Data General Nova and Eclipse; the HP 2100 series; the Interdata 16b and 32b series; the IBM 1401, 1620, 1130, and System/3; and many others. SIMH has provided a vehicle for running the earliest versions of Unix (including the first 32b port), for reconstructing lost software systems such as XVM/DOS, and extending the development life of "nearly current" systems like 2.11BSD for the PDP-11. SIMH is constantly being expanded to include new systems, additional capabilities for existing simulators, and greater interactivity with "real world" peripherals such as networks and graphics.
Juxtaposing Past with Future: Utility Computing
Balint Fleischer and Adam Mendoza of Sun Microsystems give a retrospective of storage networks and discuss how everything old is new again.
This recording will get cleaned up in a couple days.
Comments
Tom's exhibit
And in case you're wondering, Tom exhibited a Unitron Mac 512:
http://www.applefritter.com/macclones/unitron/index.html
Acutally not
Acutally, I didn't have time to get the Unitron set up, so I brought a rackmount Mac Classic with VME bus. (pictures eventually)