黑料社

Retrotech: Return to the analog age at Singapore National Museum

The 鈥楬ello Mobile鈥 room. Photo: National Museum of Singapore
The 鈥楬ello Mobile鈥 room. Photo: National Museum of Singapore

Transport back to a time when technology was foreign and up and coming in a new nostalgic exhibit by the National Museum of Singapore.

The Stamford Road museum is displaying its treasure trove of some of the most iconic technology from the 鈥70s up to the noughties at Off / On: Everyday Technology that Changed Our Lives. It runs now through Oct. 30.

鈥淭hrough the Off / On showcase, we invite visitors to reconnect with these technologies, while inspiring conversations and curiosity among the younger generations unfamiliar with them. As we are more 鈥榮witched on鈥 now than ever before, the indispensable role of technology continues to shape and change the way we live, work and play, and we hope visitors will share their unique stories and experiences with us,鈥 museum senior curator Priscilla Chua said in a news release.

Defunct pay phones, bulky laptops and vintage cassette tape players are just some of what is displayed. And unlike most exhibits, this showcase encourages visitors to touch and play with the uncased props. Don鈥檛 worry, they are replicas 鈥 the real ones are safely enclosed in glass cases.

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

The displays don鈥檛 just show what older generations used in typical museum fashion, you can also bask in nostalgia while standing in stage sets of common spaces like a hair salon, coffee shop, and office space that looks to be from the late 鈥90s.

Before there were smart devices, older generations had to live with pagers, typewriters and chunky computers. Type on the many typewriters or view early IBM and Apple computers that appear as shrines in one room.

In another, send personalized messages in handphone and pager format that will be displayed on a blown-up replica of the gadgets. In still another, a family portrait photo studio is set up with a vintage film camera taking black and white photos which are then 鈥渄eveloped鈥 in the adjacent dark room.

Shelves of old televisions in another space run local television programs, commercials and even recreated Teletext messages. 

Most rooms allow visitors to access interactive games by scanning the QR codes on their . Games include speed typing and decoding numerical pager messages.

Got a nostalgic story or photos of personal old school memorabilia? Send them in to the museum鈥檚 to help them broaden their scope of collection.

Admission is free for Singaporeans and children under 6.

More photos:

Photo: National Museum of Singapore

Photo: National Museum of Singapore

Photo: National Museum of Singapore

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

Photo: Carolyn Teo/黑料社

FIND IT
Off / On: Everyday Technology that Changed Our Lives, 1970s鈥2000s
10 June to 30 October 2022
Open 10am to 7pm daily, last admission 6:30pm
National Museum of Singapore, Exhibition Gallery, Basement Level
93 Stamford Road, Singapore

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