Obsolete No More
Lori Emerson founded CU 鶹ӰԺ’s Media Archaeology Lab in 2009 after her digital poetry class used 1983 Apple IIe computers to access bpNichol’s First Screening e-poems — the only way to read them.
The experience inspired her to get a Commodore 64, popular around the same time, to explore that computer’s differences from the Apple. Hooked on the novelty of the old machines, she kept going.
Today the lab, located in a CU-owned house at 1320 Grandview Avenue, is home to dozens of computers from decades past, plus typewriters, vintage cameras, video game consoles and a large, hand-crank phonograph machine. Visitors can disassemble an Apple II computer, go head-to-head on an Atari 2600 and copy documents on a 1960s-era mimeograph machine.
The lab enables hands-on teaching, research and artistic practice using old media that still work. Most of the technology was donated or acquired through auction sites like eBay.
Emerson’s favorite is a 1976 Altair 8800b computer, which uses switches to manually process binary 1s and 0s. She’s seen people rely on muscle memory from decades ago to work it.
“I often like to challenge my students to imagine what computing could have been like if it had developed along the lines of the Altair,” Emerson said during a tour.
Switching on an Apple II, she held her breath as the machine blinked to life.
“It’s always a relief when they turn on,” she said.
Photos by Glenn Asakawa