Unpacking the mysteries of the rare Triadex Muse from the early 1970s, the first algorithm-based sequencer/synthesizer intended for home consumers.
The ingenuity of industrial designers like Jerry Nichols helped Silicon Valley embrace mass production in the 1960s and early 1970s, transforming the Valley and the world.
The true story of Pixar's IPO and the Silicon Valley investment bankers who took a chance on Steve Jobs' passion project.
Honghong Tinn, author of Island Tinkerers, shares the fascinating history of how hobbyists and enthusiasts in Taiwan helped transform the country through innovative and creative computer use.
CHM volunteer Joe Lynch unpacks how Peter Samson's Harmony Compiler programmed the DEC PDP-1 to play music like Boards of Canada's "Olson."
AI company founders from three different eras of artificial intelligence booms (and busts) share their experiences and insights into the future of AI technology.
Ken Thompson, one of the foremost programmers and computer scientists of the last 50 years, shares stories about his life and career in a newly released oral history.
Historian and author Victor Petrov explores the rise of Bulgaria's powerhouse computing industry during the Cold War and how it evolved.
CHM is saddened to share the passing of 2018 CHM Fellow Dame Stephanie Shirley, who was a pioneer in embracing remote, flexible work for the thriving software company she founded in the 1960s.
At age 93, Nicholas F. Garcia, may be one of the last people around who worked at IBM’s first R&D lab on the West Coast, in the center of what would become Silicon Valley. His daughter tells his story.