Sunday, January 16, 2022

Sound Bytes with Walt Mossberg

We are excited to share the first installment of our newest initiative, Sound Bytes, inspired by the incredible caliber of our Decoding the Past speakers. For this project, we ask each of our speakers the same two questions and record their responses in order to build an ongoing video archive of our speakers’ expertise, reflections, and insight.


What was your first experience with personal computing?

Veteran technology columnist Walt Mossberg described what would now be called a “text chat” with a friend as his most memorable early experience with personal computers. Listen to Walt’s response to our first question, here:





If you could add one object to our collection, what would it be and why?


Walt suggested that the first camera phone photo ever taken would be a crucial addition to our collection. 



On June 11, 1997, with the internet still in its infancy, PC pioneer Phillippe Kahn created the first “camera phone” in a Santa Cruz hospital, waiting for his daughter to be born. Driven by his desire to document this momentous occasion and a need to pass the time, Kahn wired his Motorola Startac flip phone to his Casio QV-10 digital camera, which he then connected to his laptop using speakerphone wiring ripped from his car. When baby Sophie was born, Kahn held his daughter in one hand and took her photo with the other, then instantly sent the image to over 2,000 people. 


The impact of this invention cannot be understated. The ability to capture and instantly share imagery has changed the way we interact with the world and with one another. Anyone with a camera phone may now be a journalist, publisher, consumer, artist, or documentarian. The impact of image-based social media applications is debated in the highest courts, while their user numbers continue to grow. Instagram alone claimed 1.3 billion users in 2020. 


Phillippe Kahn himself has continued to be hugely influential in the tech world. He founded several software companies including LightSurf whose picture-messaging technology is used today by Sprint, Verizon, and other major carriers. Kahn has been granted hundreds of patents for innovations related to artificial intelligence, wearable technologies, telecommunications, and motion-detection. 


Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Full STEAM Ahead: Inclusion Across Generations

Join us for the next installment of our ongoing conversation series, Decoding the Past: Conversations with PC Innovators!


This session, Full STEAM Ahead: Inclusion Across Generations, is an opportunity to join a conversation with Maria Klawe, president of Harvey Mudd College and renowned computer scientist and scholar, known for her advocacy of women in STEM fields.


Maria Klawe, renowned computer scientist and scholar, began her tenure as Harvey Mudd College’s fifth president in 2006. President Klawe is the first woman to lead the College since its founding in 1955. Prior to joining HMC, she served as dean of engineering and professor of computer science at Princeton University. Klawe joined Princeton from the University of British Columbia where she served as dean of science from 1998 to 2002, vice president of student and academic services from 1995 to 1998 and head of the Department of Computer Science from 1988 to 1995. Prior to UBC, Klawe spent eight years with IBM Research in California, and two years at the University of Toronto. She received her PhD (1977) and BSc (1973) in mathematics from the University of Alberta.

Decoding the Past Speaker Announcement!

  The Paul Gray Personal Computing Museum is proud to announce Dr. ValĂ©rie Morignat as the next guest in our popular speaker series  Decodi...