Zenith wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 11:10 pm
These are not on my bucket list, because I've done them.
The National Museum of Computing at Milton Keynes. They have working Bombe and Colossus machines, an early mini computer (Eliot?) an ICL mainframe, a Cray super computer, various microcomputers from the early 80s, some playing games, almost all of Clive Sinclair's naff creations, and more.
Yup; ignore Bletchley Park next door. The Elliott 803B was the first computer I used; 8K*39bit words, with Tony Hoare's seminal Algol60 compiler fitting in the bottom 4K. Every time I've been (Sunday, after a hamfest) one of the people there has been more than delighted to whip out the schematics and discuss the details.
Ought to go to the Cambridge Museum of Computing sometime.
The Ironbridge Museum. Ironbridge is arguably the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution.
...
An industrial museum in Cardiff docks. I went there on one of their steam up days. I have an idea it's been moved.
Ironbridge is worth seeing.
Cardiff docks has Techniquest, a variant of "We the curious" in Brizzle, which is a pale variant of Richard Gregory's The Exploratorium, and something similar in San Francisco.
The Hack Green nuclear bunker. This was supposed to coordinate the response to a nuclear attack on the UK through the Cold War. There's a lot there and it's well curated. It helps if you have a particular interest in the Cold War.
Unlike some "modern" museums, Hack Green contains a
lot of technical information.
Planned to walk from a boat to the RAF Air Defence Radar Museum
https://www.radarmuseum.co.uk/ but it was closed. Grrr.
A few aircraft museums up and down the country. I've been to Cosford because there used to be a radio rally held on the site. I've driven past Duxford and was treated to a B17 doing the rounds.
I went to an airshow there, arriving in a DC3
As a kid I watched Spitfires, Hurricanes and Heinkels wheeling around in the sky over Duxford, being filmed from a bright orange Liberator.
With all these things, you have to balance the effort to get there, against the value of seeing what's there. It helps if you are in the area for some other reason, or drop by on the way back from something.
Sometimes it is worth making one of those things the primary reason for visiting an area, and finding other stuff to do.