Today I worked with Tony from about 10:45am to 3:30, and then with Steve A. from 4:00 to 8:30. We three got a lot of difficult and satisfying work done: - Moved four pallets of Univac gear into the museum (one CPU, one tape rack, one I/O console (paper tape + Model 25 TTY), and two peripheral racks. (Duane C. and Bill Drom. know the model numbers better than I do.) We put all this where it'll go long-term in the center aisle. Photo (with apologies for the strange camera angle: http://vcfed.org/evan/univac.jpg). We're going to cover the exposed parts of the pallets with black fabric. - Moved the Cray YMP-EK and StorageTek 9710 tape library into the museum. We put them in the middle of the "history of the present" wall. (That's where we will show dozens of pictures of recently obsoleted household products, along with the Cray and the tape library, all under a big sign: "Everything on this wall now fits in your pocket." It is a bit of an exaggeration for the 9710. Says at http://www.iscgroupllc.com/supported-equipment/tape-libraries/stk-sun-oracle... that the library holds up to 1.4TB, and I don't know of any smartphone with such storage capacity. Anyway, nobody (LOL, other than us) will be looking up the library maximum theoretical specifications. It makes the point very nicely that 1990s supercomputing performance and storage capacity now are (more or less) in an iPhone. A nice touch: the library plugs into an ordinary 110V outlet and fires up just fine. I'm hoping we could run some demos and let people see the robot moving around. Photo: http://vcfed.org/evan/cray_storagetek.jpg. Special thanks to Dan Jacob's son DJ for helping move the Cray (turns out the best way is to remove the front cover and then you can slide a pallet jack under it.) - We began putting microcomputers on shelving units. Got through about a quarter of them. Some of them didn't fit quite the way we hoped and so we had to make some tough decisions. For example, the Epson QX-10 isn't good atop the Lisa cart, because it's just a flat beige box and mostly disappears behind the upper slanted shelf's front lip. Another example is the TDL Xitan which did not fit where intended. Some of these systems will go into the Computer of the Month queue... there is no shortage! We also realized that even some videogame consoles can go in that queue, such as Intellivision and others which have computer-like aspects. - We took in some donations. Don brought over some IBM gear including an AS/400 and a desk-side System/36. An outside person brought us a pair of Xerox 820s, a Cosmac, and a motherlode of Xerox 1800 gear. The 1800 is uber-rare -- it was an early laptop made by Sunrise Systems, canceled before it ever went on sale to the public, and (I think) the never-sold stock was acquired by some middle company. That company released some into the wild. - Related news: More work has been done on the double door. All of the holes in the wall/ceiling, on the hallway side and inside the room, have been patched. The trim pieces were all re-installed.