Jim Scherrer, Founder and President
COMPUSEUM, INC.
Technology Center
137 North Wawaset Road
West Chester, PA 19382-6735 - USA
610-793-4600
www.TheCompuseum.org
in...@TheCompuseum.org
SKYPE = JS.Scherrer
Twitter: @TheCompuseum
Sponsors of
www.WorldComputerDay.org
Sponsors of
www.ENIACDay.org
The mission of Compuseum is to stimulate the public and the
technology industry to share information and to raise the public
awareness of the important role the digital age has played and
will continue to play in our society. Compuseum will be a
springboard into various ways to teach and discuss new and
emerging technologies, and their implications, within the
context of prior achievement. Thank you for helping the
Compuseum bring people together from across America and around
the world to learn about, discuss, and celebrate the computer
technology revolution.
The Compuseum is a fully independent, non-profit 501 (c)(3)
organization. Federal ID: #81-2285516. Your donation is
considered a fully tax-deductible contribution per guidelines
set forth in IRS Publication 526 “Charitable Contributions.” No
goods or services are provided in exchange for your
contribution.
On Twitter, we need more @TheCompuseum 'followers' so if any of
you have not yet signed up to Twitter and want to follow our
exciting mission and growth, please grow our social media
footprint and influence about our great organization!
View the history of ENIAC here:
ENIAC
Compuseum sponsors and organizes the annual World Computer Day
on February 15th to celebrate computers and the people who make
IT happen.
View the History of HP here:
Did you
have an HP-35?
View the
Worlds
First PC- Kenbak 1- By John Blankenbaker Read about John
Blankenbaker on
BBC World
News Our "Friend of Compuseum"
Scott Galloway's analysis of the
Big Four-
Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple
Elon Musk's (PENN alum) first computer was a Commodore VIC-20
from West Chester, PA. Now he builds the "Computer on Wheels" at
TESLA.
Compuseum now has the earliest climate change research software
in its collection.
Compuseum highlights the Southeastern PA site of the manufacture
of the MOS Technology 6502 microprocessor chip which was used in
the Apple I and II by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs. The group of
eight engineers, mask designers and management team
(Team6502.org) left Motorola in August 1974 and introduced the
MOS NMOS 6502 in September 1975. The KIM-1 was introduced in
1975. MOS Technology was acquired by Commodore in 1976 when they
started the PET Computer.
The history of the computer-tech revolution is well storied. Far
from exhibiting “irrational exuberance” — as infamously asserted
by economist Alan Greenspan in 1996 — tech entrepreneurs were
not only quite rational, but from the ‘bottom up’ literally
created an entirely new kind of infrastructure and permanently
transformed society. Policies and institutions have been forced
to embrace the implications or be assimilated.
To Donate to the Compuseum; simply click on the
Donate
Button on
www.TheCompuseum.org web site.
Compuseum is a 501c3 and all donations are tax deductible.
For only 20c per day, $6 per month and $72 per year you can
help Compuseum by using the monthly donation button on PayPal.