Museums have been dumbed down. The Henry Ford museum near Detroit was once aimed at people like Henry Ford, who liked the engineering. Glass cases with "Capacitor, Cornell-Dublier, 1944". That sort of thing. I once spent about fifteen minutes figuring out a piece of machinery which turned out to be a combination camera/kinescope scanner for rotating disk television. It was labeled something like "Scanner, Baird system, ca. 1935". That was dumbed down some time in the 1980s.
The Smithsonian's Museum of History and Technology had some original ENIAC panels, powered up! You could push buttons and make them count. They had a huge collection of clock escapements, which they kept wound. An Atlas Guidance Computer with someone who operated it once an hour. The original Perceptron.
Now it's the Museum of American History, and much simplified.
The Smithsonian's Museum of History and Technology had some original ENIAC panels, powered up! You could push buttons and make them count. They had a huge collection of clock escapements, which they kept wound. An Atlas Guidance Computer with someone who operated it once an hour. The original Perceptron. Now it's the Museum of American History, and much simplified.