“In the late ’60’s I worked for Bell Labs for a few years managing a data center and developing an ultra high speed information retrieval system,” says Lawrence Luckham (born July 12, 1943). “It was the days of beehive hair on the women and big mainframe computers. One day I took a camera to work and shot the pictures below. I had a great staff, mostly women except for the programmers who were all men. For some reason only one of them was around for the pictures that day.”
These photos are from 1967.
![Bell Labs California 1960s](https://flashbak.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Bell-Labs09.jpg)
Yvonne
A good sense of humor was one of the things that distinguished almost every one of my staff for this project.
![Bell Labs California 1960s](https://flashbak.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Bell-Labs10.jpg)
Computer Operations Supervisor
This was a large IBM mainframe computer around 1967 when this picture was taken. One meg of memory, 648 meg of hard drives, no video and it cost in the millions!
![Bell Labs California 1960s](https://flashbak.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Bell-Labs06.jpg)
Bea
The computer room was in the basement of a building for security and other reasons. There was no natural light and I had a slim budget for decoations. I also had staff with artistic talents so I bought the materials and they made their own decorations.
![Bell Labs California 1960s](https://flashbak.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Bell-Labs14-1200x796.jpg)
Programmer Relaxation
Bits and bytes and a little folk music go a long way. All the programmers were mathamatitions by training.
Via: Larry Luckham
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