Sunday, December 4, 2011

Computers, Not Fruit: The Apple Museum

I was all prepared not to like the Apple Museum.  After all, I'm not a computer geek - my eyes glaze over every time one of my technophilic friends starts talking about coding or trying to explain the new features on their iPhone.  So imagine my surprise as I was working my way through the Apple Museum and thinking, You know, this is actually kind of interesting.


The cool parts of the Apple Museum are the sections on Apple Facts, Codenames and Prototypes.  Apple Facts explains things like why the company was named Apple, where the Apple logo came from and what Carl Sagan has to do with Macs.  Codenames gives a pretty detailed list of what products were called internally as they were being developed (although, frustratingly, the origin of these names isn't explained).  Prototypes is my favorite part of this museum, because it includes pictures and descriptions of Apple products that were developed but never caught on in the market.  Who knew that Apple once tried to market a screen-based portable phone called W.A.L.T., or that there was a computer called Stumpy?

There's also a comprehensive Apple Data section, and although this part made no sense to me, it has a lot of detail on a lot of products, so I'm sure more computer-minded people would find it useful.  There are also biographies of four of Apple's founders and early developers - Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, Rod Holt and Jef Raskin - which are nice additions to the website, but I suspect that you could find a lot more information on Wikipedia.

Unfortunately, amid this wealth of information, there are some problems.  The Products section of the website is completely empty, and the in the Timelines section only three of the five links actually work (and these are just data dumps of dates and products).  There is also a History section which could have a lot of potential, if only it weren't laid out in a Cliff Notes-style outline.  The text in the museum is also a little hard to work through because it's just not well-written.

If you can ignore these frustrations and just focus on the good parts, the Apple Museum really is quirky, informative and surprisingly fun.  If you love computers, this museum is for you - and even if you don't, I would recommend at least browsing.  You may find yourself, like me, beginning to reconsider that maybe computers aren't so nerdy after all.

The Apple Museum
Mission:  The Apple Museum of a non-commercial project, founded in 1998.  With our continuously growing database, we have become the largest and most comprehensive Apple history website on the internet.
Website:  www.theapplemuseum.com

No comments:

Post a Comment