Some fun photos from Large Scale Systems Museum near Pittsburgh!
This magnificent Enter on both sides of this Singer/Friden minicomputer console.

DEC disk pacs (and some magnetic tapes) everywhere.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RK05

Some very good on/off switches…

…and some very good regular switches, too.

(I liked the whole hierarchy of toggles in that last photo.)

Although the FILE UNSAFE… switch? light maybe? was unexpected.
A strange way to put an LED inside a button.
On the other hand, this is a cool way to choose a font.
This Dasher line famously inspired Severance set design…
…but I have never seen a screen-less printer-terminal like this one!
Speaking of, some more nice keyboards.
Loved this guarded (and hyphenated) RESTART key.
Which one is more scary: a Mac keyboard pretending to be a Space Cadet, or a Kaypro keyboard with an extremely intense overlay?
(Mastodon rate limited me! More in a bit.)
I miss the old terminal proofreading-inspired icons for INSERT and DELETE.
Here: symbols for inverse video, blinking, underlining, and… something?
This is a rare space-saving variant of the famous DEC keyboard that established the inverse T arrow key standard.
All the classic colors of CRTs: amber, white, green, and burn-in.
(Hey computer, read the room.)
For blue, you have to go with IBM blue.
If you looked carefully, you might have spotted this Y2K readiness sticker on the last photo.
Fun tape changing instructions on the device itself.
Not-so-fun instructions from an accounting computer that was used at a funeral home.
Fun arrangement of ports on an IBM computer + a secret inventory # Gorton.
Just a lot of shoddy Gorton all around. 🧡
The future was once now.

@mwichary

worked some years with two 780s and a 750. These we're nice machines to work with.

But quite funny: my pimped Amiga 2000 at home with 68030 and 68882 FPU was running the same applications at comparable speed