THE HERALD   EVERETT, WASHINGTON
HeraldNet on Facebook HeraldNet on Twitter HeraldNet RSS feeds
Welcome, Guest | Register | Sign In
 Home   Work        Follow Business_Herald on Twitter @Business_Herald   RSS feed RSS
Published: Sunday, August 15, 2010

Computer scientist saves tech curiosities for museum

BALTIMORE -- In the mid-1980s, as part of his computer business, Bob Roswell began accumulating a surplus of unsold and unwanted computers that he couldn't bring himself to throw away.

As advances in computing marched on through the 1980s and 1990s, Roswell took those computers and put them to new use: as historical exhibits. Today, Roswell runs what appears to be the largest computer history museum in Maryland. It can be found at System Source Inc., a computer services company in Hunt Valley, Md., operated by him and his business partner, Maury Weinstein.

"He's got some rare things there that took him a while to get," said Joyce Little, professor of computer and information sciences at Towson University. "It's grand; it's really grand."

Over the years, Roswell has assembled a collection of authentic and replica computing gadgets, from the abacus to the mobile device. He gives about three 30-minute tours a week, mostly to students of his company's computer classes, though the exhibit is open to the public during work hours.

"It's a hobby," said Roswell, 52, during a recent exhibit tour. "We're not ready to compete with the Smithsonian or anything."

Roswell's collection of computer artifacts is far larger than what is on display. He has a few hundred items on display, with thousands more -- hard drives, monitors, dot-matrix printers and other gadgets -- stored in his computer company's warehouse. The continuing challenge is to sort through it all and make a determination on what is worthy enough for showcasing.

"I can't begin to display it all," said Roswell, a computer science graduate from Yale University.

Roswell usually waits years to add newer devices, partly because he wants to gauge their historical impact on the computing industry and also because he can find them cheap or for free on eBay.com or other sources. For these reasons, he said, there won't be an Apple iPad on display anytime soon.

There are only a handful of official museums in the United States dedicated to computers. The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History has a computer exhibit in Washington.

On the West Coast, the world's largest collection of computer artifacts resides in Silicon Valley, at the Computer History Museum.

Little lamented that academic institutions seem less interested in maintaining exhibits on computing history.

Computer companies and hobbyists, such as Roswell, often fill a void in their communities by setting up their own exhibits, according to Alex Bochannek, a curator at the Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley in California.

Bochanek said people get nostalgic about the first computer they used, and can relate to the gadgets on exhibit on a personal level. But historical computer exhibits can also educate people, he said.

"They used to be seen as menacing, but a lot of people now couldn't imagine their daily lives without computers," Bochanek said. "To a lot of people, it's just a big metal box. But you have to explain to people what the applications were, what people could do (with a computer) when before they could not."

Among the items on display at Roswell's museum are a comptometer, a 19th-century addition and subtraction machine; a 1960s-era DigiComp 1, a plastic computer that could do simple math and play some logic games; and an Altair 8800, a build-it-yourself kit from the mid-1970s that became the first popular PC.

Story tags » 

Computers & Information Technology
Comments
NORTHSOUND ClassifiedsNORTHSOUND Classifieds
Top Jobs
Homes
Autos

HeraldNet highlights

Red flags for Reardon's run
Red flags for Reardon's run: Exec used public resources for political fundraising, records show
Thinking ink?
Thinking ink?: Read up on tattoos before you commit to one
Can you give a pet a home?
Can you give a pet a home?: Updated gallery: Animals seeking adoption in Everett
Rescuer becomes the rescued
Rescuer becomes the rescued: Everett Mountain Rescue volunteer had to rely on teammates