07 september 2013

The Valley that Rudolph and Sletten Built

Hewlett Packard Buildings 52/53, Steven’s Creek and Lawrence Expressway, Santa Clara
Architect: Clark, Stromquist & Sandstrom
Photograper: Martin Wax
© R&S limited; Courtesy of Kenneth G. Sletten



Apple Research and Development Campus, 856,000 square feet, 1993
Architect: Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabuam, Inc; BAR Architects(interior) and Gensler Architecture and Design (interior)
Photographer: Marvin Wax
© R&S limited; Courtesy of Kenneth G. Sletten



(Computer History Museum | @CHM : The Valley that Rudolph and Sletten Built)

Programmed Data Processor-1


Programmed Data Processor-1
Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC)
1961

This is the marketing brochure for the DEC PDP-1. Announced in 1960, Digital Equipment Corporation's (DEC) PDP-1 marked a radical shift in the philosophy of computer design: it was the first commercial computer that focused on interaction with the human user rather than the efficient use of computer cycles. Basing his designs on MIT's Lincoln Laboratory TX-0 and TX-2 computers, Ben Gurley designed the 18-bit machine in under three–and–a–half months. DEC produced only 50 of these machines. It also had an optional high-resolution graphical display that MIT students used to play Spacewar!, the first interactive computer video game.


(PDP-1 Restoration Program - Computer History Museum)