The North
American
Data
Communications
Museum
(NADCOMM)

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The North American Data Communications Museum Page

NADCOMM

This page is a link to a unique, collective museum which emphasizes data communication. "Data Communications Technology from Telegraph to Digital Transmission." The main location is in San Diego, California, but properties in four other cities house parts of their collection. Their web site is: http://www.nadcomm.com/

Don Robert House is the curator. He reports, "We are moving soon to downtown San Diego in an old art-deco building. We are being hosted by the Computer Museum of America (external link). Right now, NADCOMM is open evenings and weekends by appointment only. After the move it will have regular hours like the CMA. When I retire in August I will be spending 8 months a year working on the museum."

 
303 Dataset
2W 50Kb (1971)
 201 Dataset: Early modem
(1968)
37 KSR "Printing Telegraph
(1973) 
 33 ASR
Teletype 
(1968)
35 ASR Teletype
(1968)

The thumbnail images above link to much larger images on the NADCOMM site. They take a while to load but they are full of details. Bookmark the site or make it one of your favorites. Check back every now and then for developments

Besides many good photographs, the site also has an excellent data transmission timeline: http://www.nadcomm.com/timeline.htm

Mission Statement (from the NADCOMM site)

The North American Data Communications Museum (NADCOMM) is committed to the project of collecting, displaying, and operating the equipment which has powered the communications revolutions of the twentieth century, from telegraphy to digital telephony. The collection, largely donated by committed telecommunications workers and businesses, already encompasses a wide array of machines spanning the entire history of teletype and the transition to contemporary digital modem technology.

NADCOMM's goal is to counter the present state of communications history, marked by the quick and successive obsolescence of "last year's models," by maintaining a working collection of functional equipment tracing the stages through which teletechnology has passed.

Curator Don Robert House and the NADCOMM staff believe that this project involves more than the nostalgia of the technophile. The advances in technology preserved in the NADCOMM collection have shaped not only the present state of technology but economic, social, and cultural history through their use in industry and mass media.

Whether or not we accept the premise that these advances mark the transition of world history into a wholly new postmodern "Information Age," their impact on contemporary culture makes the unique project of NADCOMM a vital one. Moreover, the fact that equipment is displayed in a functioning state means that the NADCOMM collection remains a valuable resource for hands-on technological training for the communications professional and the interested layperson alike.

Richard House NADCOMM Public Relations

http://www.nadcomm.com/

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