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  2. CSIRAC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSIRAC

    CSIRAC (/ ˈ s aɪ r æ k /; C ... After being exhibited at Melbourne Museum for many years, it was relocated to Scienceworks in 2018 and is now on permanent display ...

  3. Melbourne Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melbourne_Museum

    IMAX Melbourne Museum was the world's largest screen until the opening of the Traumpalast IMAX in Leonberg in 2021. Located eight-storeys beneath Melbourne Museum, IMAX Melbourne opened in 1998 with the world's largest screen measuring 31 m × 28 m (102 ft × 92 ft). It has been owned and operated by Museums Victoria since 2004.

  4. Scienceworks (Melbourne) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scienceworks_(Melbourne)

    Melbourne Planetarium is housed on site. Until late 2013, the 1883 clock tower from Flinders Street station was also located at the museum. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The clock had been moved to Princes Bridge station in 1905 and Spencer Street station in 1911, where it remained until sold into private ownership after the station redevelopment of 1967. [ 6 ]

  5. Museums Victoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museums_Victoria

    Museums Victoria is an organisation that includes a number of museums and related bodies in Melbourne. These include Melbourne Museum , Immigration Museum , Scienceworks , IMAX Melbourne, a research institute, the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Royal Exhibition Building and a storage facility in Melbourne's City of Merri-bek .

  6. IMAX Melbourne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMAX_Melbourne

    The cinema is located eight storeys beneath the Melbourne Museum, and is the largest IMAX theatre in the Southern Hemisphere [1] [2] and the second largest in the world [3] by screen size, at 32 m × 23 m (105 ft × 75 ft). [30] The cinema seats 461 people, including 25 VIP seats. [31]

  7. CSIRO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSIRO

    It was over 1,000 times faster than the mechanical calculators available at the time. It was decommissioned in 1955 and recommissioned in Melbourne as CSIRAC in 1956 as a general purpose computing machine used by over 700 projects until 1964. [36] The CSIRAC is the only surviving first-generation computer in the world. [37]

  8. 'It's Juan Soto, just with a different uniform': Soto’s first ...

    www.aol.com/sports/juan-soto-just-different...

    Soto, clad in an all-black, $190 sweatsuit and carrying a $3,350 backpack, arrived at Clover Park in Port St. Lucie right around 7 a.m. Birds chirped peacefully in the dew-drenched morning as the ...

  9. Computer music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_music

    CSIRAC, Australia's first digital computer, as displayed at the Melbourne Museum. Much of the work on computer music has drawn on the relationship between music and mathematics, a relationship that has been noted since the Ancient Greeks described the "harmony of the spheres".