Almanac note · History and culture
Computer History Museum turns Silicon Valley into a walkable story
Computer History Museum in Mountain View connects Silicon Valley to computing history through artifacts, exhibits, demos, software stories, and a former SGI building.
Mountain View’s Computer History Museum is a good place to make Silicon Valley feel less invisible. A lot of tech history can sound like offices, chips, code, and company names. The museum turns that into things you can stand near, read about, and sometimes watch in motion.
The museum’s roots go back to the late 1970s on the East Coast, then the collection moved west in the 1990s. In Mountain View, it became a Silicon Valley anchor for computing history, with exhibits, artifacts, oral histories, demonstrations, and programs about how digital life got here.
The building adds another layer. The site was once the headquarters for Silicon Graphics, a company tied to an earlier era of visual computing. That makes the building itself part of the story: one tech age moved out, and a museum about many tech ages moved in.
This is a useful stop for people who feel boxed out by tech language. You can start with the big exhibits, then look for the small objects that make the past feel human: punched cards, early machines, software stories, prototypes, and demo labs. Confirm hours and demo times if there is something specific you want to see.
Where to see it
Computer History Museum, 1401 North Shoreline Boulevard in Mountain View.
Official sources
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Reviewed July 2, 2026
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