Retronaut Website: 1952 Behind the Scenes at Lyons. Pictures and text about Lyons
with a mention of them as computer pioneers. https://retronaut.com/content/1952-
behind-the-scenes-at-lyons – link broken
HistoricTech.com This site is not an online museum and all items are (or were) for
sale. Instead Edd Thomas goes in search of iconic, rare, unique and sometimes just
fascinating pieces that help to tell the story of the global Technology and
Electronics Revolution of the last century or so. It is a story that combines science and
design with social history, and we are happy to sell far older pieces when they help tell
the story of what came after. The simple aim is to help uncover and preserve the
material pieces that matter, and put them in the hands of the people who will
appreciate them the most. Aimed primarily at the discerning collector and institution,
Edd Thomas is relentlessly foraging for new and interesting items to offer. Each piece
is backed up with a level of academic and historical accuracy (as well as market
understanding) that we feel make them great social and economic investments. We
recognise that our expertise is young and growing and we can only hope to succeed
with your patronage and advice. Our buying policy will always be one of quality over
quantity, and in all instances age and financial value are not the defining virtue for our
stock but cultural relevance. This is because the extremely fast pace of technological
change has made some inventions (even from just a few years ago) seem positively
archaic, while others appear timeless. The collection includes for LEO COMPUTERS
the following: 50 schematics and waveforms for the LEO II some of which have been
annotated (One of the schematics looks to be from LEO I). Developmental notes,
notebooks, waveforms, schematics, draft manuals, photos and publicity all for the
LECTOR Auto reader. Booklets, leaflets and notes related to other English Electric
Leo Computers including the KDF9 and LEO III. One or two of the manuals are the
draft provisional copies. Amongst the items noted, (2019) and described are LECTOR
and AUTOLECTOR includingphotos of the Optical Mark Reading forms designed for
the Lyons Bakery ordering application and LECTOR itself. It includes an Advert for
LECTOR published in the Computer Bulletin by EELM in December 1963. See
https://historictech.com/the-lector-auto-lector-optical-mark-machines/
Historic Tech.com, Read More »
Mary Coombes – 3 mins Mary Coombs shares her story – YouTube
Mary Coombes, more – 4 minutes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHiCMfHydlo
Interviews with Mary Coombes, Read More »
Interview with Chris Monk – 55 mins
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0Z0ynyzs0E
Interview with Chris Monk – 55 mins, Read More »
Charles Babbage Institute and University of Minnesota Libraries Digital
Conservatory, provides links to any LEO material held in the Library including the
Pinkerton Oral History. See
http://conservancy.umn.edu/handle/11299/59493/browse?type=subject&value=LEO(Computer)
Charles Babbage Institute and University of Minnesota Libraries Digital Conservatory, Read More »
,the body representing the academic Information Systems discipline world-wide, publishes two journals, the high repute AIS Journal and the Communications of the AIS. Both journals have published articles on LEO or referring to LEO, and it organises major conferences annually on the discipline. The AIS provides an annual award to members who have made significant contributions to the discipline of Information systems. The award is named the LEO AWARD, as a reminder of the pioneering role LEO took in the evolution of computers in information systems. May 2022, Brook Pritchett (brook@aisnet.com) appointed AIS Historian with his own web presence. It includes an explanation of the AIS LEO Award and those who were honoured with the award, plus a reference and link to the LEO Film. See:
https://ishistory.aisnet.org/awards/leoaward/
As of May 1st 2022 the total membership of the AIS was 4399 and increasing
Association for Information Systems (AIS). Read More »
unites past and present of communication in its permanent exhibition: therefore it illustrates the origins, the development, and the future perspectives of the information society. Appealing rotating exhibitions cast light on different aspects of communication. The permanent exhibition features a cabinet that shows the history of digitalization. Within this cabinet information about and pictures of the early LEO-Computers are presented.
https://www.google.co.uk/search?rls=com.microsoft:en-GB:IEAddress&dcr=0&tbm=isch&q=%EF%82%A7%09The+Museum+of+Communication,
+Berlin+LEO+Computers&chips=q:the+museum+of+communication+berl
The Museum of Communication, Berlin. Read More »
Purchased a Microprogram Module from a standard LEO III in 2013. The item is not on display but shown on its website together with a brief account of the LEO story written by Barbara Ainsworth. See
http://collections.museumvictoria.com.au/articles/12682 The curator is (2018)
Nicholas Crotty: ncrotty@museum.vic.gov.au
Museum Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. Read More »
(www.acms.org.au). The society has an extensive collection of 10,000 artefacts collected over the last 25 years but currently lacks a catalogue of its collection. Contact Sebastian Boell
Australian Computer Museum Society. Read More »