Guests at the open house were able to witness the ribbon cutting ceremony that dedicated the museum and were then invited to tour the facility. The museum is still a work in progress, but visitors were able to wander through "Visible Storage," which is a nice way of saying the museum under construction. In reality, the available exhibits are very well placed, planned and documented. Of course the remaining 80+ percent of the museum's collection still needs to be un-boxed, cataloged and displayed, as appropriate.
As a volunteer, I was assigned the job of "Greeter" at the front door which kept me busy for most of the night. Fortunately I was able to get to the museum early to take the pictures below, all of which were hastily taken before or during the ribbon cutting.
 | The first thing visitors see upon entering visible storage is a veritable wall of PCs. |
 | Here are a few very significant machines from the PC collection including a Sol 20, a Scelbi, an Altair and an SWTPC 6800. |
 | Another batch of PCs on display. |
 | Part of the small machine/microcomputer exhibit was dedicated to some very nice home-brew systems. |
 | Perhaps my favorite exhibit in the museum is one of the few remaining Apple I machines. This one is in a simple wooden enclosure and signed by Steve Wozniac himself. |
 | I took a few "panoramic" shots of the visible storage area showing many of the bigger computers and the basic layout of the room. |
 | Some more Big Iron. |
 | And more. . . |
 | And still more. . . |
 | Many of the exhibits deal with particular technologies such as this exhibit area for Core Memory. |
 | And here is a "wall" of core. More of a screen, really. |
 | This display shows some difference engine parts and documents (middle shelf) as well as some Jacquard Loom cards, parts and information (top shelf.) |
 | What kind of party would it be without some food! |
 | And Drink! |
 | Perhaps the oldest item on display were some Jetons or Reckoning Counters. |
 | Easily the most impressive single machine on display is the one-of-a-kind Johniac. |
 | An LGP-30 console with a teletype style terminal. |
 | The Philco 212 is another impressive mainframe. |
 | The Sage is one of the most popular tube-era computers on display. |
 | The WISC (Wisconsin Integrally Synchronized Computer) was another impressive tube-era machine. Gene Amdahl, of IBM and then Amdahl Corporation, was a principal engineer. |
 | Although impressive looking, I don't think these scissors cut much. |
 | The press were on hand to cover this historic event. |
 | John Toole speaks at the ribbon-cutting ceremony. |