Subject: Conservation of computer hardware
Daniel Joest <lcjoest [at] yahoo__com> writes >... I am interested in the >conservation of more modern objects, especially computers. So my >question is if anybody has experiences with conservation of computer >cases and/or the electronic components. ... I suggest this informative paper: Jon Ecklund and Beth Racine. "Ensuring a Future for Our Present High-Tech Past: Lessons from the ENIAC for the Conservation of Major Electronic Technology" in Saving the Twentieth Century: The Conservation of Modern Materials, Symposium Proceedings published by the Canadian Conservation Institute, pp. 249-259, 1993. In my on-going efforts to gather information on the subject of preserving computer hardware, I have culled two important guidelines about the storage of hardware: batteries and any foam rubber used in the hardware casing should be removed before storage. The foam rubber will almost inevitably degrade into countless particulates, creating a sticky mess; battery acid, of course, can corrode, causing a potential health hazard and its caustic properties may damage the artifact and hinder its operability. In addition to Stanford University Libraries, there are several U.S. institutions which collect hardware, such as: the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif.; the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC; and the Charles Babbage Institute at the Center for the History of Information Technology at the University of Minnesota. Of course many computer manufacturers keep some equipment for their corporate archives. Good luck with your research, Hannah Frost Media Preservation Librarian Stanford University Libraries *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:33 Distributed: Thursday, November 14, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-33-002 ***Received on Tuesday, 12 November, 2002