A trip down HP's memory
lane
CNet News
Jul 12, 2006
A trip down HP's memory lane
In 1960, when Hewlett-Packard built offices
and a new boardroom at 1501 Page Mill Road in Palo Alto,
Calif, the facility was state of the art and evoked the
new frontier. Now, it's a nostalgic reminder of a time when
people smoked in their offices and nearly every available
surface was covered with simulated wood paneling.
HP doesn't throw out a lot--the 20-foot
table in the main conference room today is the same one
the board used to meet around. The offices of deceased co-founders
David Packard and Bill Hewlett are still intact too. We
took a tour this week and here's what we found.
Is this a ride at Tomorrowland? Is it a
pancake house somewhere in Los Angeles? It's the entrance
to 1501 Page Mill Road.
The mosaic, which decorates the entrance
to the building, extols the wonders of geometry. There are,
however, no Pan Am stewardesses nearby.
A "D. Packard" nameplate still
graces the office of co-founder David Packard.
The 200C oscillator, which the company
sold between 1941 and 1954. (Oscillators essentially generate
high-frequency waves for communications.) The 200C is an
improvement on the 200A oscillator, the company's first
product, which it sold to Walt Disney. There is no 100 series
of oscillator. The company didn't think Disney would buy
something from a company that had only put out one product.
HP's first inkjet printer, introduced in
1984. HP Labs devised thermal inkjet printing, with the
first models called "thinkjets." Although the
thinkjet name disappeared, inkjet printers did go on to
replace dot-matrix printers.
The HP-35 scientific calculator, which
debuted in 1972, around the same time dingo boots were in
fashion. It had logarithmic and exponential functions and
could handle 10-digit numbers. It replaced the slide rule.
Bill Hewlett told the designers to make something that would
fit into a shirt pocket.
Hewlett's office. Employees occasionally
go in and leave change on his desk, and HP officials then
donate it to charity. Since a lot of the money is foreign,
it probably doesn't get used in the soda machine. You don't
see chairs with wheels like this much anymore.
Packard won the National Medal of Technology
in 1988.
Packard's '60s phone. (Packard's and Hewlett's
offices are next to each other but divided by the executive
washroom).
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