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- From: jcmorris@mwunix.mitre.org (Joe Morris)
- Subject: 1960's vintage advertisements (was: 1960 Bernoulli Disk Drive)
- Message-ID: <jcmorris.722283055@mwunix>
- Sender: news@linus.mitre.org (News Service)
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- Organization: The MITRE Corporation
- References: <1edt6sINNskg@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 18:10:55 GMT
- Lines: 35
-
- rfd@po.CWRU.Edu (Richard F. Drushel) writes:
-
- [discussion of 1960 magazine ad]
-
- > Many of the other ads in this journal are (to me, at any
- >rate) surprisingly sexist. One from Eldorado Electronics says
- >"How Do You Measure and Sort? This way --> [woman sitting in
- >front of giant 'scope] or this way --> [tiny box; line drawings
- >of woman and 'scope with Xs drawn through them]" (p. 1410). Another
- >shows a Bob Dobbs type lounging against a Benson-Lehner computer,
- >leering at a pretty keypunch operator; a comic-strip word balloon
- >from the man has punchtape and punchcard holes, while the woman
- >says "I was beginning to think you'd never ask!" (p. 1264).
-
- That was a rather unfortunate characteristic of many of the ads of
- the period. One I remember was for (some company I forget) bragging
- that its languages "included Dumb Blonde".
-
- Several years ago Datamation magazine for its 25th (?) anniversary issue
- reprinted some of the vintage advertisments from its early days. A few
- of the ads which the editor wanted to use could not be printed because
- the companies involved refused -- from embarrassment -- to permit their
- republication.
-
- OTOH, there were some really beautiful ads back then. One of the most
- popular -- to the point that many readers cut them out and posted them
- on office walls -- were from Honeywell. Some artist would take
- computer components -- wires, resistors, circuit boards, and whatever
- else came to hand -- and used them to create extremely well-done
- animal figures. You could even buy posters of them; one ad (for both
- Honeywell machines *and* the posters) made the artwork the main headline:
- it went something like "One duck. One horse. One cow. One dog. One buck."
- (advertising a poster of four figures for $1. -- obviously a long time ago.)
-
- Joe Morris / MITRE
-