Unfortunately, museums are no longer a safe place for donated and rare artifacts. Paul Allen's heirs just want to keep their $17 billion for themselves.

Never have been. If there is one thing in life I have learned it's that the purpose of a museum is not to preserve history.

The purpose of a museum is to destroy history.

Oh the reasons are good: History will be preserved, culture will be remembered, artifacts will no longer sit in the dirt. But throughout history, from the Library of Alexandria to the museums of kings to the Middle Ages, people would pile all of their art, culture, and works into nice compact buildings.

Then when the ignorant mobs come they have a single place to torch to remove the heresy and treason counter to the current "beliefs". And it's all gone.

Think about ISIS, think about what happened in Iraq, think about the LCM, the Boston Computer Museum, and all of that. Sad but when you find an artifact in the ground the best thing you can do for it is to cover it up and forget it existed....

C



See Paul Allen’s Living Computers: Museum article. https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/paul-allens-living-computers-museum-labs-will-close-permanently/


On 28.08.2024 20:39, John Herron via cctalk wrote:
Fool me once... (Jk but ironic museum suggestion given the subject).

On Tue, Aug 27, 2024, 1:14 PM Wayne S via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
wrote:

Keep it preserved somewhere.
Out of sunlight and maybe in a container of some sort. Might want to
consult a museum about preservation. Is the market hot for publications?
Sent from my iPhone

On Aug 27, 2024, at 10:29, Sellam Abraham via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
Keep it wrapped and sell it. You can read it online.

Sellam

On Tue, Aug 27, 2024, 9:39 AM osi.superboard via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:

I do have a 1975 Byte#1 issue magazine unopened in its original Byte
mailing paper wrap.

Should be worth a few more pennies to read this issue for the first
time. Or should I ?

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