By Harry McCracken | Saturday, December 31, 2011 at 12:09 am
Here at Technologizer, our primary beat is obvious: It’s what’s new and what’s next in personal technology. But we have a rewarding secondary topic, too. It’s what’s old–sometimes very old–in tech.
Throughout the year, we look at personal-technology products of the past, sometimes on major anniversaries and sometimes just because we feel like it. Many of these articles are among the most popular ones we publish.
As we close out 2011, here’s a recap of the history we explored this year, mostly in pieces by me and by Benj Edwards, who does great work both here and at his Vintage Computing and Gaming site,, among other places.
The Legend of Zelda Oddities (February 21st)
Osborne! (April 1st)
Remembering the Apple I (April 8th)
15 Amazing Computing Rarities of the 1990s (April 17th)
Polaroid SX-70: The Art and Science of the Nearly Impossible (June 8th)
John Linnell of The Might Be Giants: A Technologizer Tech Interview (June 13th)
Sonic the Hedgehog Oddities (June 22nd)
Donkey Kong Oddities (July 11th)
It’s Selectric! (July 27th)
IBM PC Oddities (August 11th)
A World Without the IBM PC (August 12th)
Gone in 60 Seconds: The Shortest-Lived Tech Products Ever (August 19th)
Steve Jobs Steps Down the First Time: The 1985 Press Coverage (August 25th)
iPod Oddities (October 23rd)
The Life and Times of Windows XP (October 24th)
The Pros and Cons of the Internet, as Taught to Students in 1996 (October 28th)
4004! (November 15th)
Computer Space and the Dawn of the Arcade Video Game (December 11th)
December 31st, 2011 at 2:13 pm
Harry, I really enjoyed the SX-70 article and took me back to the time when my Granddad was what we now call an "early adopter". He bought one of those first, elegant SX-70 cameras and the whole family marveled at the pictures. Your article brought back those memories of wonder at how those pictures could come out of that slim camera. Thanks for a really great read.
Mel
December 31st, 2011 at 5:11 pm
Correction: The They Might Be Giants link actually goes to an article about alternative operating system.
December 31st, 2011 at 7:20 pm
Thanks, will fix!
December 31st, 2011 at 10:42 pm
So we're being nostalgic about being nostalgic? Pretty sweet! This is why I come back to this site. Nostalgia.
January 3rd, 2012 at 2:08 pm
That computer (wooden Apple) is one of my favorites. Really captures the early days of the Micro.
January 4th, 2012 at 7:41 am
I heartily endorse this post. Happy New Year, everybody.