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PC Museum a labour of love for this giving geek

PC Museum a labour of love for this giving geek

By:  Greg Enright  On: 06 May 2007 For: Network World Creator

Brantford, Ont. native Syd Bolton has turned a lifelong passion for PCs and electronic games into a museum -- literally -- in his own back yard.

Syd Bolton is "the geek that geeks look up to."

At least that's how an old high school acquaintance of the Brantford, Ont. native described him when they bumped into each other recently. The well-intentioned description was issued with good reason; after all, when you bring together a lifelong collection of about 250 computers spanning the last three decades of PC history and house them in your very own, not-for-profit computer museum, the title seems apt.

"I had three computers at age 12: a Commodore 64, a Vic20 and an Apple II," says Bolton, 35. "At 16, I had managed to amass 16 different computers and I said to myself, 'I'm going to have a computer for every year I am old.'"

That growth rate held true until his early twenties when, "I went off-kilter and suddenly had 40 computers." A few years later, the count was over 100. And as the tagline at sydbolton.com proclaims, he should be 250 years old by now.

"People were chucking these machines and it upset me," says Bolton, who works as a professional software writer. "I thought that somebody had to start taking responsibility for them and making sure people didn't forget about them."

After storing his burgeoning collection in places as diverse as his mother's furnace room and spare offices at his various businesses, Bolton finally found the home he'd been dreaming of for all those Ataris, Amigas and ColecoVisions: a former church and bus shed at the back of a Brantford house he purchased in 2005. There were no electricity or water lines running into the building, let alone the 50 or so high-speed Internet connections that snake through the premises today.

"It was kind of ugly-looking, but I knew it would be perfect for the museum," says Bolton.

With the help of a construction-minded friend, Bolton gradually transformed the building from a neglected eyesore into a nerd's nirvana.

The Personal Computer Museum was born.

Overwhelming collection

If you remember playing games or doing work on a computer back in the '70s, '80s or '90s, the chances are pretty good that Bolton has a model of it — in good working order. There's the toolbox-like Osborne 1, released in 1981; 1983's Sinclair ZX81; and more popular consoles, such as the ColecoVision and various members of the Atari family.

"The museum is overwhelming, with the scope of the collection," says museum visitor Derek Dresser, a friend of Bolton's who has paid three visits. "You get a great sense of nostalgia. It reminds me of how much choice we had back then. You had Atari, Apple, Commodore and Intellivision, each with their own unique pros and cons."

Dresser was also impressed with how well Bolton has displayed his wares.

"It's a very clean place and well-laid-out. Even though it’s a not-for-profit, it's very professional. You get the sense that [Bolton] is somebody who has made this out of love, a real passion. You've got to really like [computers] to do it and it comes through."


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Greg Enright Greg Enright is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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