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Saturday, September 30, 2017 (all day)

Math Reunion (Sept 2017)

The Faculty of Mathematics held a pancake breakfast in Mathematics 3 on September 30, 2017 to celebrate 50 years of Mathematics, and we set up some small tables with recent acquisitions and old favourites.

Saturday, October 28, 2023 10:00 am - 4:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Hardware Day - October 28, 2023

Our second Hardware Day of 2023 will be Saturday, October 28, 10am to 4pm in DC2585.

We'll be testing old hardware to get some of it running. Come join the fun! You can help or bring your own retro computer to show off, or just see what's up.

Tuesday, March 5, 2024 10:00 am - 4:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Computer Museum Hardware Day March 5, 2024

The Computer Museum will be hosting a hands-on event with a variety of old computers and artifacts. 

We will have a guest speaker, Devon Merner, who will talk about how the iMac G5 was used in the development of the Xbox.  Includes live demo.  Devon's talk starts at 2pm.

Mark your calendars! 

More details to come.

Tuesday, June 18, 2024 10:00 am - 4:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Hardware Day - Tuesday June 18, 2024

The Computer Museum will host its next Hardware Day on Tuesday June 18th, 2024 from 10am to 4pm in the Davis Centre "Fish Bowl" (DC1301)

We plan to bring out the DEC pdp11/04 and the Waterloo Computer On Wheels ("the WatCOW"), another PDP 11 system that was used for outreach in the 1970s.  We will also have a variety of portable computers and some of our functioning vintage systems (Commodore 64, Apple II, Macintosh, TRS-80)

Listen to Don Cowan describe the WatCOW (YouTube Link) at the Math Faculty 50th celebration

Speaker: At noon, Lanny Cox will present the PiDP-8 and PiDP-11 systems - a pair of scale-model simulations of DEC minis running on a Raspberry Pi using the SimH simulator. His talk is entitled "My Many Mini-Minicomputers: Peeking Inside The PiDP".

"Lanny Cox is a lifelong computer enthusiast with great interest in the DEC minicomputers of the 1960s and '70s, but not much space to store them, or extra spare change to pay the power bill. Luckily, though these computers are no longer in production, a dedicated community of engineers have spent decades preserving their hardware and software and making their computing environments available to a new generation of users.

Join us for an exploration of DEC's significance in computing history, a look at modern efforts to make computers like the PDP-8 and PDP-11 accessible to home users, and perhaps even a scale-model demonstration of these iconic machines."

All are welcome!