It's fun to see this, mostly because things from Rhode Island don't often end up on the NH front page :)
A related organization, the Rhode Island Computer Museum [1], is also great. Their warehouse (which is unfortunately by appointment only) is full of all sorts of really important gear from computing history. Their Learning Lab is more easily accessible, and has a few old PDPs, if I recall correctly.
I've been to the RICM and while the warehouse is kinda neat, everything is just sitting rusting. They're not doing anything with what they're sitting on, and a lot of it is very poorly protected/packaged. The warehouse was enormous, filthy, and had large doors open to the outdoors (far down the other end, but still.)
They're also (reportedly) rather anti-Apple/Macintosh.
I lived for awhile in North Kingston RI and I absolutely loved the Rhode Island Computer Mueseum. It was usually staffed by older gentlemen, who would absolutely love to go into any topic related to computers they knew about. One of my now core memories is playing the original space wars on a working (only 8 remaining if i remember correctly) pdp 12 with one of my friends in elementary school.
While housing obviously takes center stage in real estate market discussions, these quirky little elements in cities all but evaporate when you get past a certain price point. In cities I've lived in, like Boston, the areas I spent time in got so bland in a vaguely upscale, premium-end-of-mass-market sort of way. I moved to a smaller city cheap enough for people to do neat things sort of like this and will never move back to a big city while it's drowning in housing costs and a thoroughly "upmarket basic" cultural bent.
Thank you so much for sharing this! I've been in Rhode Island for a few years and never heard of this. I'll absolutely be making it to their next open house.
It does not cease to amaze me how all those large computers are less capable than their heavily miniaturized counterparts that are now part of everything. And how the most common use went from complex mathematical and scientific applications, to TikTok.
[+] [-] eminence32|2 years ago|reply
A related organization, the Rhode Island Computer Museum [1], is also great. Their warehouse (which is unfortunately by appointment only) is full of all sorts of really important gear from computing history. Their Learning Lab is more easily accessible, and has a few old PDPs, if I recall correctly.
[+] [-] marcus0x62|2 years ago|reply
Was that a New England-Freudian slip?
[+] [-] jjice|2 years ago|reply
Thank you for sharing this!
[+] [-] CoastalCoder|2 years ago|reply
The people were super friendly, and I got a great explanation about debugging hardware faults on the PDP (PDP-9?) that was there.
Now if only there were software-dev meetups in this end of the state :)
[+] [-] KennyBlanken|2 years ago|reply
They're also (reportedly) rather anti-Apple/Macintosh.
[+] [-] Kennnan|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] chefandy|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jjice|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] cyberax|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] IntelMiner|2 years ago|reply
The current word is the "owner" has no interest in it however but cannot close it down. So she's simply letting it fade into memory
[+] [-] 29athrowaway|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dang|2 years ago|reply
The Retro-Computing Society of Rhode Island - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8818078 - Dec 2014 (6 comments)
[+] [-] djsedaw|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Koshkin|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] CoastalCoder|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] vitarnixofntrnt|2 years ago|reply
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