Retro-Futuristic Computing
HawaiianMayan asks:
"Sure, if you're a collector you might have a working computer from the
60s or even the 50s in your basement or garage. But what about from the
20s or 30s? Lately I've been dreaming of a retro-futuristic computer, with
all the convenience of a modern desktop (I don't want to deal with
punchcards!), but styling from the early part of the 20th century. I'm
wondering if any of the hardware hackers out there are working on
anything like this. It would need an
appropriate case,
a manual typewriter keyboard,
a black and white screen,
preferably enlarged by a nice
freznel lens,
and lots and lots of nixie tubes,
knobs,
and blinkenlights.
Would it be too much if the numeric keypad was a
rotary
dial?" Think about the computer props used from such classics like
Max Headroom (both
the movie and the TV series) and Brazil,
and you'd be very close to what the submittor is looking for. I must admit, making a
computer in this fashion would certainly be a break from the beige box and
monitor!
That the Powermate is also a blinkenlight - you can adjust the pulse rate from stroboscopic, to a nice slow pulse of about 30 seconds for a cycle.
I have one - it rocks. In addition to it being a cool looking blinking object on my desk, I use it for scrubbing through video in iMovie, and scrolling through text in project builder.
It is also, I admit, a great volume control for iTunes...
I have an old PowerBook G3 that I'd been planning on subjecting to a similar conversion to the first item (the old radio case) mentioned, but hadn't figured out an appropriately anachronistic mechanism for the CD-ROM drive. I'm not sure if the pop-out internal drive can be adapted to a vertical orientation, but since it's one of the "old school" models that actually holds the CD in place, I just might be able to pull it off.
My basic plan had been to mount the thing in a largish jewelry box, replacing the lower storage compartments with the mainboard, keyboard and trackpad (painted to match, of course), and mounting the LCD on the underside of the lid. That would do prevent the classic fresnel lens for the display, of course, but it would mean that the whole thing would sort of "disappear" when placed on an end-table or desk.