Difference between revisions of "Computer History Museum Slovenia"
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
https://www.instagram.com/racunalniskimuzej/ | https://www.instagram.com/racunalniskimuzej/ | ||
https://www.facebook.com/muzej.si | https://www.facebook.com/muzej.si | ||
+ | mastodon:https://mastodon.social/@muzej | ||
}} | }} | ||
Line 63: | Line 64: | ||
*[[Technical Museum of Slovenia]] | *[[Technical Museum of Slovenia]] | ||
*[[National Museum of Contemporary History]] | *[[National Museum of Contemporary History]] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
Revision as of 10:25, 16 April 2024
Exhibitions
The museum is usually open 3 days a week (please check museum's website for the opening hours before your visit) with a permanent exhibition What about the software? which holistically presents interesting aspects of software from technical to social impact. It is conceptualized in a thematic and fully interactive way and will enable the public to try out many computer programs from different periods on more than 30 working machines. The oldest exhibited interactive software piece dates back to 1986.
Currently on display is also the guest exhibition The Glass Room: Misinformation Edition by Tactical Tech which is an interactive engagement exhibition that invites people to think critically and proactively about their relationship with digital technologies. How can we identify "fake news" and verify information? How does misinformation amplify on social media? How do online profiling and political influence work and affect our decisions?
Exhibition at the Slovenian Computer History Museum, Ljubljana.
Besides the exhibitions every week the museum hosts various information technology-related events, meetups and conferences (space is always available to rent), in-house programming lessons for children aged 7-13 and pre-arranged guided tours of the exhibitions and various workshops related to computer science and emerging technologies such as generative artificial intelligence.
Slovenian Computer History Museum's event space, Ljubljana.
Background
The collection grew out of the Cyberpipe activities. This community hackerspace, focused on open source and other free technologies was established in 2000. It was managed by the K6/4 Institute up to 2013 when the association, established by the museum's founders, took over the museum collection. Two years later Cyberpipe dissolved.
Cyberpipe housed the first computer museum in Slovenia and organized many events or projects dealing with computer history. The museum was interactive so that visitors could use Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Atari 1040ST, Macintosh SE, IBM PS/1, IBM PC XT, etc.
The Slovenian Computer History Museum's collection storage, Ljubljana.
See also
Other IT collections in Slovenia: