Computer Printout Photo Album from 1986

I got such a positive reaction from my last post about the 33 year old recovered photos of my first home computer setup that I became motivated to finally get a photo album I had spoken of in an earlier post photographed and online to share.

Back in 1986/87 I filled a few pages of a (physical, not digital) photo album with color printouts generated by the computers I owned at the time. One page is a printout from my Apple IIe that was equipped with an ImageWriter II printer, while the rest of the came from the computer that replaced that IIe, an Atari 520ST that sported an Okimate 20 color, 24-pin, wax-transfer printer. The IIe image is a crack screen and the ST images were mainly taken from Compute!’s Atari ST magazine + disk. I recall buying the magazines month-to-month at the grocery store a mile from home in Newport News, VA shortly after we moved to that town. I was 14 years old at the time.

I’ve photographed each page of the album containing a printout and placed them in a Flickr album. (The rest of the album is filled with photos taken while visiting friends at other colleges as well as a photo-chronicle of my 3,500 mile round trip drive (over a weekend…) to the College of Santa Fe, to do with a long-distance relationship gone south. Oh, to be young and to feel love’s keen sting…)

Have a look inside:

the_album

As I mentioned earlier, one of the images was the very first GIF (#softG) that I ever saw. I hope you enjoy this little bit of digital-to-analog computer graphics history I’ve been able to share.

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4 Responses to Computer Printout Photo Album from 1986

  1. Ron says:

    I’m curious about the picture that advertises The Dark Castle BBS. It says “24 Hours – 10 megs – Quality movies”. What kind of movies would you be able to fit (a bunch of) in 10 megabytes, and be able to play on those computers?

  2. Asterisk says:

    Some of the images are very recognizable — the picture of the house is Jim Sachs’ DPaint rendition of his house (http://www.pcmuseum.ca/sachs4.asp), and the juggler is from a famous demo (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7rKj0DU8Xs). Both originated on the Amiga.

  3. Asterisk says:

    I pasted the wrong link above — the Juggler and Cat Amiga demo is actually at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g03rcG7F4PU.

  4. Pingback: My January 1986 Macworld Magazine Is Missing Page 13 | Byte Cellar

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