Living Computers: Museum + Labs Explained

Logo Alt:LCM+L Logo
Location:2245 1st Avenue South
Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Coordinates:47.5825°N -122.3347°W
Type:Computer museum
Key Holdings:PDP-10, IBM Mainframes, Apple 1, PLATO
Founder:Paul Allen
Curator:Aaron Alcorn
Publictransit:King County Metro, Link light rail
Car Park:Onsite and Street Parking

Living Computers: Museum + Labs (LCM+L) was a computer and technology museum located in the SoDo neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. LCM+L showcased vintage computers which provided interactive sessions, either through time-sharing operating systems or single-user interfaces. This gave users a chance to actually use the computers online or in-person in the museum. An expansion had added direct touch experiences with contemporary technologies such as self-driving cars, the internet of things, big data, and robotics. LCM+L had also hosted a wide range of educational programs and events in their state-of-the art classroom and lab spaces.

According to an archived version of LCM+L's website, their goal was "to breathe life back into our machines so the public can experience what it was like to see them, hear them, and interact with them. We make our systems accessible by allowing people to come and interact with them, and by making them available over the Internet."[1]

The museum closed in February 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] In June 2024, The Paul Allen Estate announced that the museum would be permanently closed and that the museum's collection, most of which was owned by the Estate and not the museum itself, would be auctioned off by Christie's.[3]

History

LCM+L (originally known as Living Computer Museum, and before that, PDPplanet.com) was founded by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, on January 9, 2006. Through PDPplanet, users were able to Telnet into vintage devices and experience timesharing computing on equipment from Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) and XKL.[4]

Users around the world could request a login through the LCM+L website and telnet into systems from XKL, DEC, IBM, Xerox Sigma, AT&T, and CDC.[5]

The museum opened to the public on October 25, 2012, and guests could visit in person to interact with the collection of mainframes, minicomputers, microcomputers and peripherals the museum had on display.[6] Various and changing exhibits in the museum showed how much computers and technology had changed over the last 50 years and were changing still.[7] In 2013, Seattle Weekly voted the museum the "Best Geeky Museum" because it highlighted "an essential part of Seattle binary history - the founding of Microsoft and its role in establishing Seattle as a tech-driven industry".[8]

On November 18, 2016, the institution changed its name to Living Computers: Museum + Labs to reflect its enlarged goals of igniting curiosity through direct touch experiences with contemporary technologies as well as vintage computers.[9]

The museum closed in February 2020 and did not reopen afterward due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[10] The Allen Estate announced the museum's permanent closure in June 2024 with plans to auction off some materials in the collection.[11]

Dave Plummer posted to one of his YouTube channels a private tour of the museum. Plummer posted to X saying "Thanks to Christie's Auctions, I managed to get a private tour of the Living Computers Museum in Seattle. It's been closed since Covid, and now everything is being auctioned off, so it's your last chance to see it all... and you can only see it here!"[12] [13]

Collections and exhibits

The collection consists of publicly donated items and Paul Allen's personal collection. The working computers on display included one supercomputer, seven mainframes, 10 minicomputers, and over three dozen microcomputers.[6]

Various artifacts from the museum were borrowed and featured in TV shows such as Mad Men[14] and Halt and Catch Fire.[15]

Computers

Manufacturer Model Type Year Introduced Available for public use Telnet access[16]
hand-held 2007
microcomputer 1987
microcomputer 1976
II[17] microcomputer 1977
microcomputer 1983
microcomputer 1980
microcomputer 1984
microcomputer 1998
Macintosh SEmicrocomputer 1987
microcomputer 1999
minicomputer 1983
video game console 1977
microcomputer 1979
microcomputer 1985
MPC 1600 microcomputer 1982
microcomputer 1977
microcomputer 1982
microcomputer 1989
microcomputer 1983
supercomputer1967
operator console1964
peripheral 1964
peripheral 1964
Cray-1mainframe 1975
microcomputer 1978
minicomputer 1969
minicomputer 1964
minicomputer 1970
mainframe 1968[18]
mainframe 1971
mainframe 1974
mainframe 1974
mainframe 1979
minicomputer 1975
minicomputer 1969
minicomputer 1982
terminal 1981
Dimension XPS B733 microcomputer 1999
Digi-Comp II reproduction toy computer 1965 (original patent); 2012 (reproduction)
6180 DPS-8/M maintenance panel and Multics emulator peripheral; emulation of mainframe 1973 (mainframe)
System/360 Model 30 mainframe mainframe 1964
System/360 Model 91 front panel peripheral 1966
peripheral 1964
mainframe 1983
microcomputer 1981
microcomputer 1984
microcomputer 1984
PDS-1 "sImlac" emulator emulation of minicomputer 1970s (minicomputer); 2017 (emulator)
microcomputer 1975
minicomputer 1974
microcomputer 1975
microcomputer 2007
microcomputer 1990
video game console 1993
microcomputer 1982
microcomputer 1976
Sol-20 microcomputer 1976
microcomputer 1983
microcomputer 1986
microcomputer 1984
microcomputer 1986
terminal 1963
terminal 1963
terminal 1968
hand-held 1982
microcomputer 1981
mainframe 1971
minicomputer 1973
Alto "ContrAlto" simulator emulation of minicomputer 1973 (minicomputer); 2016 (emulator)
mainframe 1995
mainframe 2005

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What is Living Computer Museum? . https://web.archive.org/web/20161024130958/http://www.livingcomputermuseum.org/About-Us/What-is-Living-Computer-Museum.aspx . October 24, 2016. October 24, 2016 . dead.
  2. Web site: LIVING COMPUTERS: MUSEUM + LABS IS CLOSING FOR NOW. July 10, 2022. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20240315143713/https://livingcomputers.org/Closure.aspx. March 15, 2024.
  3. Web site: July 8, 2024 . Inside the historic computer collection of Microsoft co-founder Paul G. Allen . Christie's.
  4. Paul G. Allen Launches Web Site Dedicated to Early Computers; PDPplanet.com Site Celebrates Historic Mainframes and Minicomputers Business Wire. www.businesswire.com. July 4, 2018.
  5. Web site: Application for a Guest Account on the Living Computers: Museum + Labs. July 4, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181130132342/https://livingcomputers.org/Discover/Online-Systems/Request-a-Login.aspx. November 30, 2018. dead.
  6. Web site: Home - Living Computer Museum. July 4, 2018. dead. July 2, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180702220656/https://livingcomputers.org/.
  7. Web site: Seattle's Living Computer Museum tempts tech tourists. USA Today. August 17, 2016.
  8. Web site: Best Geeky Museum: Living Computer Museum. August 17, 2016.
  9. Web site: Paul Allen's Living Computers: Museum + Labs rebranded and expanded to better 'ignite curiosity' . October 25, 2016 . . Kurt . Schlosser.
  10. Web site: Paul Allen's Living Computers Museum remains closed after years, despite lifted COVID restrictions . 25 September 2022 . Kayvon . Bumpus.
  11. News: Schlosser . Kurt . June 25, 2024 . Seattle's Living Computers Museum logs off for good as Paul Allen estate will auction vintage items . . June 25, 2024.
  12. https://x.com/davepl1968/status/1827863018417561619
  13. Rare Private Tour of Seattle's long-closed Living Computer Museum . 2024-08-25 . Dave's Garage . 2024-08-26 . YouTube.
  14. Web site: Fashion and Style: Episode 704: Mad Men: The Monolith. AMC.
  15. Web site: Welcome To 1986: Inside "Halt And Catch Fire's" High-Tech Time Machine. August 27, 2016.
  16. Web site: Request a login . October 31, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201024205742/https://www.livingcomputers.org/Computer-Collection/Online-Systems/Request-A-Login.aspx . October 24, 2020 . dead .
  17. Web site: Vintage Computers . December 26, 2019 . dead . January 2, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200102211247/https://livingcomputers.org/Computer-Collection/Vintage-Computers.aspx .
  18. Web site: PDP10 manual. Dec 1968.