
A California Museum Weighs the Promise and Perils of Tech
The presence of one of Google's bikes here signals how embedded the museum is geographically, and culturally, in Silicon Valley. So do the names of tech insiders on a donor board inside, near the museum's new exhibit: 'Chatbots Decoded: Exploring A.I.'
An introductory panel describes advances in artificial intelligence as both worrisome and wondrous, the result of a long obsession with talking automatons. Glass cases contain a human form made to speak (by trickery), an attraction at long-ago carnivals, and vintage books fantasizing about robots.
Through a gap in the opening sequence of panels, visitors catch a glimpse of Ameca — a torso and a head on a pedestal, with eyes that often follow visitors through the space.
When I reached Ameca, I asked it to rap about the history of the computer. Its pale blue eyes flitted sideways, then it served up this bit of narration: 'Apple with its bytes so bright, personal computing taking flight. IBM joined the fight, turning data into insights overnight.'
This was wondrous enough, an introduction of sorts to the stories of two American tech giants featured centrally in the main exhibition, across the lobby, 'Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing.'
The design firm Engineered Arts modeled and produced Ameca, releasing it in 2021; a limited number have since circulated to trade shows and museums. Designed to be without gender or race, (its face is covered in gray rubber skin), this Ameca was purchased by the Computer History Museum for this exhibit and is programmed to access a version of ChatGPT, the famous conversational A.I. app.
After I left Ameca, a young boy approached it. Many of the words he said were inaudible, but 'I hate you' was in the mix.
'I get it — robots can be uncanny,' the humanoid responded mildly.
In an interview in the museum's airy lobby, its chief curatorial and exhibitions officer, Kirsten Tashev, said Ameca often met with such hostility. Tashev spoke of 'the uncanny valley phenomenon' — an English translation of a term used first by the Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori in the 1970s to describe human unease, even disgust, with something almost human but not quite.
It is not just Ameca that seemed to generate that mix of wonder and worry. The 'Chatbots' exhibit explicates the breakthroughs that led to recent advances in A.I. as a prelude to assessing the pros and cons of those advances.
It speaks of deep learning, a term computer scientists use to mean the creation of artificial neural networks, mimicking the human brain's architecture and its ability to learn and make decisions.
It alludes to another term of art, large language models — the foundation of the ChatGPT technology used by Ameca — addressing how machines have been trained to generate human language by devouring much of the texts our gregarious species has generated.
From there, the exhibit speaks to how, on one hand, A.I. might be deployed to find cures for disease, but on the other how undergraduates use A.I. to shirk critical thought.
This is the two-step done in many exhibits here: They celebrate the creativity involved in devising and marketing new tech tools while placing them in a sufficiently broad context for consideration of their impact on the quality of our lives.
'We use the words 'promise' and 'peril' a lot,' Tashev said as she sat looking out the museum's glass frontage, toward the edge of the Googleplex.
Among the approximately one million artifacts in the permanent collection, the museum's incoming president and chief executive, Marc Etkind, singled out the computer that helped guide the first Apollo mission that landed on the moon in 1969.
That refrigerator sized box sits about halfway through the main exhibition, which provides a broad overview of the evolution of technology.
This exhibition begins with a discussion of the Antikythera Mechanism, an ancient Greek device some scholars say was used to predict the timing of eclipses, continues through the abacus and slide rule, then considers the more recent past, as we have moved from massive, expensive tabulating and calculating machines to ever-smaller, cheaper, more powerful ones.
On a free tour, a docent noted that the 1946 ENIAC — a small section of which is here — was the size of a three-bedroom house and had a fraction of the memory used in today's smartphones.
Also comparatively short on memory was one of the collection's highlights, the kit computer known as an Apple-1 — this one signed by Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple with the other, more well-known Steve, Steve Jobs.
But the exhibit, as a whole, rebuts what might be called the great man theory of computer history, featuring, throughout, many contributions made by women, among them Margaret Hamilton, who helped develop the onboard flight software for the Apollo program, and, more recently, Donna Dubinsky, the co-founder of Palm, Inc., the company behind the Palm Pilot.
Dubinsky, who is a former member of the museum's board (and married to its founding board chair Len Shustek), said in a phone interview that she saw another through line in the standing exhibit. 'The leaders in tech missed the major trends over and over. The leaders in mainframe computing were not the leaders in the minicomputer revolution, the minicomputer leaders were not the leaders in personal computers, the PC leaders were not the leaders in hand-held.'
Other visitors might find different through lines. Creative types might focus on the exhibits showing how computer-aided design programs expanded what buildings could be created, and how synthesizers powered many of the greatest hits of the 1980s.
Military-history geeks might check out the Enigma machine (used by the Nazis to send coded messages during World War II), while longtime gamers might see if they can still win at early games like Ms. Pac-Man and Pong.
'There is nostalgia, absolutely, in the DNA of the Computer History Museum,' Dag Spicer, the museum's senior curator, said in a phone interview.
Though the word history is in its title, the museum has tried to stay relevant, he said, to 'weave itself into the current ecosystem' of Silicon Valley. It frequently hosts events with leaders — recent ones have featured the likes of Bill Gates and OpenAI's former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever.
As the museum moves forward, it has reached for a new tone. Even in exhibits that annotate and admire human ingenuity, the curators try to allow space for subtlety, and to respond to a backlash in certain quarters against the ongoing computer revolution. The common aim among the curators interviewed is to speak to both the promise and peril of new innovations.
'There are questions the public has,' Tashev said. 'We're not being sensational. These are actual questions, and if we don't address them as a museum, we're not doing our job.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Apple is still trying to overturn the ban on the Apple Watch blood oxygen sensor
Apple is making another attempt to appeal the trade ban that forced it to remove the blood oxygen sensor from its smartwatches, Reuters reports. The company was forced to remove the feature in 2024, following a decision from the International Trade Commission (ITC) in 2023 that banned sales of the Apple Watch for violating health tech startup Masimo's patents. The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit heard new arguments from Apple and Masimo's lawyers on Monday over the legality of the original ITC ban. Apple's argument is that the fact Masimo was developing its own smartwatch when Apple released the Apple Watch Series 6 in 2020 — the first of the company's wearables with a blood oxygen sensor — shouldn't be enough to justify the ban. Masimo disagrees. The appeals court has heard the company's arguments before, and even briefly paused the trade ban in December 2023 while the ITC considered Apple's request for a longer pause. Ultimately, the ITC ruled in Masimo's favor and denied Apple's request. Apple removed the blood oxygen sensor in 2024 so it could restart sales of the Apple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2 in the US. The companies' fight goes beyond just the blood oxygen sensor — Masimo's smartwatches were, ironically, found to infringe on Apple patents — but clearly Apple is hung up on the feature. The company's blood oxygen sensor was never as accurate as the pulse oximeters used in a doctor's office, but it was part of a fairly comprehensive suite of heart health features on the smartwatch. It's entirely possible Apple wants to reintroduce it in its watches as part of an even more ambitious health feature down the road.


Time Business News
23 minutes ago
- Time Business News
How to Buy iTunes Gift Cards in Bangladesh (Easy Guide)
In today's world, iTunes gift cards are not just gifts. They let you buy apps, music, games, and movies. You can also pay for iCloud or Discord Nitro. You don't need a credit card! But in Bangladesh, buying these cards can be hard. Some sellers are fake. Some give wrong codes. This guide will help you buy safely. An iTunes card is a card with money on it. You can use it to: Buy apps and games Pay for Apple Music or Apple TV+ Get more iCloud storage Buy things in games like PUBG or Free Fire You put the code in your Apple ID. Then the money is ready to use. Many people in Bangladesh face these problems: No Apple Stores in the country Shops don't sell the cards Some codes online are fake Facebook sellers cheat Some codes don't work at all So, it is best to buy from safe websites. This is a good website in Bangladesh. It sends codes fast by email. You can pay with: Why it's good: We say: Very safe and trusted! This is a global site. But it is hard for many people in Bangladesh. Why: You need a dollar card (Visa or MasterCard) bKash and Nagad don't work here Some find the site hard to use Use this only if you have an international card. Sometimes Daraz sells iTunes cards. Good sides: bKash works The site is trusted Bad sides: Cards may be out of stock It may take 1–3 days to get the card Many sellers on Facebook say they sell cheap cards. But most are fake. They may say: 'Send bKash first, I'll send the code.' 'Trust me, I have good reviews.' Don't trust them. You can lose your money. Method Safe to Use Works Best With bKash ✅ Yes AroraShop, Daraz Nagad ✅ Yes AroraShop Rocket ✅ Yes Some sellers Visa/MasterCard ❌ Hard OffGamers Buy only from trusted websites Don't send bKash to a stranger Keep screenshots of payments Read real reviews first If it seems too cheap, it's fake After you get your 16-digit code: Open App Store Tap your picture (top right) Tap 'Redeem Gift Card' Type the code Open iTunes or Apple Music Click Account > Redeem Log in Enter your code Note: Use a US card only with a US Apple ID. Q: Can I buy Discord Nitro with the card? Yes! If you use Discord on iPhone, it works. Q: What if the code does not work? If you bought it from AroraShop, they will help you. But Facebook sellers will not. Q: What if I buy the wrong region card? It will not work. Always check your Apple ID country first. You can buy iTunes cards in Bangladesh. Just use safe websites. The best one is: AroraShop They are fast. They are safe. They take bKash and Nagad. Many people trust them. Stay safe. Don't trust Facebook sellers. Always check before you buy. Enjoy your gift card and have fun! TIME BUSINESS NEWS


Hamilton Spectator
28 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Cierra Ortega exits ‘Love Island USA' villa following backlash over resurfaced racial slur posts
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Cierra Ortega, a contestant of this summer's 'Love Island USA' left the villa just a week before the finale of the hit reality series is set to air on Peacock. Her departure, announced Sunday, followed weeks of uproar from viewers after old posts from Ortega resurfaced that contained a racial slur against Asian people. The show's narrator, Iain Stirling, announced Ortega had departed 'due to a personal situation' early in Sunday's episode. Ortega becomes the second contestant this season to depart the show amid controversy due to past social media posts. Yulissa Escobar abruptly exited last month in the second episode after clips of her using racist language resurfaced online. Her departure was also not explained in the show. A spokesperson for the show declined to comment Monday. Ortega's family posted to her Instagram story Sunday evening following the announcement of her departure, asking the public 'for compassion. For patience. For basic human decency. 'While Cierra is not in the villa anymore, she is still away. She hasn't had the chance to process any of this or speak for herself,' her family wrote. 'But we know our daughter. We know her heart. And when she returns, we believe she'll face this with honesty, growth, and grace.' Her family said they, along with Ortega's friends and online supporters, have received threats, attacks and cruel messages on social media, noting that 'no one deserve that kind of hate, no matter what mistakes they've made.' 'Love Island USA' is an American spin-off of the original U.K. series and is airing its seventh season . The show airs daily except Wednesdays and brings young singles together in a remote villa in Fiji to explore connections with the ultimate goal of finding love. Couples undergo challenges and are encouraged test their romantic connections as new contestants are introduced. Islanders are routinely 'dumped' from the villa throughout the series as stronger couples form. The winning couple receives $100,000. The show, which strips contestants of their phones or access to the outside world, has previously asked fans to avoid cyberbullying contestants. Host Ariana Madix called for fans to stop doxxing and harassing the show's stars in a recent interview with The Associated Press. Ortega entered the villa at the end of the first episode as a bombshell, one of the first in a steady stream of new contestants who come in after the show began, often expected to disrupt existing couples and create new relationship dynamics. Ortega quickly coupled up with Nic Vansteenberghe, whom she remained with up until her departure. Her exit broke up one of the few consistent couples of the season. The couple had just announced a few episodes prior they were 'closed off,' a popular 'Love Island' phrase to indicate neither contestant was interested in exploring a connection with any other islander. 'Before Cierra had left, my mind was clear. I knew what the future would look like, and now, I'm lost,' Vansteenberghe said during Sunday's episode. Vansteenberghe stayed on the show as a single islander after Ortega left, and he ultimately re-coupled with fellow contestant Olandria Carthen before the end of the episode. Belle-A Walker, a contestant who was dumped earlier this season, took to Instagram to express heartbreak over Ortega's resurfaced posts. Walker, who is Asian American, said she is 'deeply appreciative' of the show's producers 'for taking a stand and making it clear that racism of any kind is not tolerated.' 'Asian hate is oftentimes overlooked and dismissed. But being a first-generation American, I have personally witnessed and experienced how real and hurtful comments like these are,' Walker wrote on her Instagram story page. 'It is my hope that this situation can help shed light on how big of an issue anti-Asian hate really is.' Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .