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1-48 of 48
- Loonette the clown and her dolly Molly solve everyday problems while residing in the comfort of a large couch.
- The most popular television program about consumer technology during the rise of the personal computer revolution from 1983 to 2002. Episodes featured interviews with luminaries from the tech industry.
- "The Show" ran for 26 weeks in 1970 bringing a "who's, who" of contemporary rock bands and folk singers to national television. In 1969, during the early years of public television, and only a year after the Public Broadcasting Service began, WITF-TV in little Hersey, Pennsylvania, applied to PBS for a grant to produce a national series of programs for high school kids. It was to be called The Show...a forum where young people could address the events of the day with prominent guests and listen to contemporary music. This was the year of Woodstock, so the importance of music in the life of teens was vital.
- A comparative look at the new breed of IBM lookalike PCs.
- As files got larger and disk storage capacity stagnated, software developers came up with utilities to compress and shrink the size of files.
- In 1979, a plant malfunction causes confusion and radiation leak. As fear spreads, so does suspicion that the authorities are concealing the truth.
- 202242mTV-147.1 (243)TV EpisodePanic strikes the community as a full-blown catastrophe looms. Locals mobilize to confront the authorities and protest the nuclear power industry.
- During cleanup at the plant, insiders claim that cost-cutting measures and intimidation tactics create a danger far worse than the accident itself.
- Despite disturbing revelations of wrongdoing at Three Mile Island before and after the accident, the utility fights to bring the plant back online.
- AT&T's computer operating system is threatening to take over IBM's MS-DOS dominance.
- An in-depth look at IBM, the IBM standard and the impact of its dominant role in the PC marketplace.
- The Atari ST is a big hit in Europe but it's not very popular yet in the U.S. A look at some of the cool features that attract Atari fans.
- Laser disks and optical storage devices are changing the way we can use computers.
- A survey of the technology embedded in modern office buildings and private homes.
- A look at early computer games. Featured are Earl Weaver Baseball, Ferrari Formula One, Tower of Myraglen, and Shanghai.
- Computer Aided Design (CAD) programs are used by engineers and architects, but new simplified CAD programs have come out for personal computers that let individual consumers use the power of CAD software.
- A look at new software programs that reside in RAM and are always ready but may conflict with each other.
- In the late 1980's PC users were ecstatic over the introduction of 32 bit processors and CPUs running at the blazing speed of 33 megahertz. This program looks at some of those performance innovations.
- While we now take a computer mouse for granted, fifteen years ago there was still a debate about what would be the ultimate pointing device.
- Neural networks are artificial intelligence systems modeled after the human brain. This program looks at several examples and applications.
- With the advent of Windows 1.0, software vendors came out with new programs to take advantage of the new GUI operating system.
- With color and graphics moving into the world of personal computers, display technology became an important subject.
- In 1992, the big issue was - is it worth the money to upgrade my 386 PC to the new 486 chip?
- Most popular software titles get there as the result of an expensive sales and marketing campaign. Other programs are so popular they climb to the top of the charts just through word-of-mouth, or BBS chat.
- The worlds of television and computers are quickly converging. This program looks at new video applications on personal computers.