The most renowned Slovenian computer is a server known as Stenar. 💻 Acquired in the independence year of 1991, Stenar was instrumental in connecting Slovenia with the world, facilitating the free flow of information. 🌍🔗 At our museum, Stenar proudly stands as a permanent exhibit, open for public viewing.
🦕🖥️ The Lear Siegler ADM-3A terminal (1976) looks like it's straight out of The Flintstones 😃 We received it 12 years ago from the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, and it dates back to the times before the influential VT100 terminal.
Dear women, pioneers of computing, early programmers and all of you, who took us into the digital age, thank you. On this International Women’s Day Computer History Museum Slovenia congratulates you for all your contributions. Introduce yourselves to us, so we can get to know you personally, hear your stories and learn of the history as you remember it happening.
40 years later, a game for the ZX Spectrum will be once again broadcast over FM radio! 📻 Anyone who still has a working Spectrum ZX will then be able to test the game. 🎮 Those who do not have one can do so at the museum or online. 💻
First #HandheldMuseum post! I used to share my collection on #Instagram but gave #Meta the boot long ago. Enjoy, let me know what you think, share/repost, and, if you have experience with a device I post, consider sharing your story so I can add human context them. First up…
📓✒️ If you had purchased Corel Ventura 5 for desktop publishing in 1995, you would have received a booklet to help you browse through the 17,000 included cliparts. 😁 Did you use clipart for your documents and presentations? What about WordArt? 😆
🎮🕹️ We have a rich collection of video games for many classic systems: 405 for NES, 92 for SNES, 115 for Game Boy, 47 for Nintendo 64, 232 for Atari, 121 for Sega, and 500 more. 😀😀
💼💻 Many people would have loved to own an HP 200LX in 1994. It's powered by a 186 processor running MS-DOS 5.0, with 2 MB of available RAM, and offers plenty of I/O ports and expansion possibilities.
The Robotron A5120 is a historic East German computer produced in the 1980s by VEB Robotron. 🚀 You might recall spotting it in the thrilling #deutschland83 TV series. ✨
😍 Super Mario Bros 64 😲 Unofficial port of Nintendo's classic on Commodore 64. After several attempts, we loaded it with the help of Arduino Nano and 5 wires thanks to the uno2iec project 💪
⌨⬛ This is the NeXT computer. Tim Berners-Lee and Robert Cailliau used it at CERN to set up the first web server, id Software developed games like Doom and Quake on it, and at Slovenian daily newspaper Delo they used it to digitize the entire newspaper production process.
🔴📺 Sinclair ZX Spectrum has also found its place in our showcase, alongside a cool red retro TV. 😍 The total length of our exhibition showcases is an impressive 50 meters. 💪
🧙♂️💿 ZuluSCSI™, equipped with the RP2040 chip, is a magic wand to enable systems that only support SCSI drives. It can emulate multiple hard drives and CD drives simultaneously. We are thrilled!
♊🧠 (february 1999) The Intel L440GX+ Server Board supports two Pentium® III or Pentium II processors, Ultra2 SCSI (LVDS) storage and 2 gigabytes of SDRAM memory. 😲
📚🔑 This is one of the first USB flash drives - the IBM DiskOnKey - with a capacity of 8 MB, equivalent to over 5 floppy disks 💾 And yes, it still works, we tested it 😍
🧠💻 This isn't just a personal organizer - this little HP 200LX (1994) means business, boasting a 7.91 MHz 80186 processor and running the MS-DOS operating system 🤩