Forums › Life › Computers, Gadgets & Technology › UK : East : 40 years since official opening of BT Adastral Park Research Centre
Although today (post privatisation/austerity) it is sadly a shadow of its former self (I have visited it a couple of times; much of it is empty now and the rest only filled with short term staff from overseas) it is at this place where a lot of concepts in telecommunications and computer science that todays fixed and mobile networks make use of were discovered.
Thanks very much for posting GL, would love to visit but it’s a shame it’s so badly overlooked as a part of history (guessed this place must have succeeded Dollis Hill as was mentioned in the article which I’d have loved to have seen).
BT, and prior to them, the Post Ofice, have developed some incredible technologies, not to mention the worlds FIRST COMPUTER (not the US’s late entry, ENIAC). Such a shame that stuff isn’t preserved.
Unfortunately BT today struggle to preserve their operational line plant or even stuff from 1970s onwards; though there is plenty of it in private collections of their former engineers (including whole working telephone exchanges in peoples sheds :laugh_at:).
The early computer and networking technology was originally a civilian development to route telephone calls in London; both the concepts and hardware were widely reused in various parts of the UK for this purpose.
Loads of new tech was pioneered in the UK but we kept it shrouded in official secrecy (even though the original BT films from 1970s show some sophisticated piece of kit clearly being sold to the Soviet Union!) then Thatcho rushed to privatise BT so anything that didn’t provide immediate commercial gain was starved of investment in the 1980s.
They may still do occasional visits there but there really isn’t a lot to see now; the more interesting science lectures in the training halls have been stopped due to economic cutbacks and various bits of the building is now shared between BT, O2, Arqiva, Huawei, Cisco (and some others) and regularly visited by Home Office boffins (as its where the emergency service comms is designed) so its always at 110% paranoia mode.
In any case most telecoms equipment made since 1980s isn’t particularly interesting to look at – it looks just like anything else you would find in a comms rack anywhere in the world – and the lot of it is probably now maintained by about 3 overworked dudes with moustaches somewhere in Bangalore.
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Forums › Life › Computers, Gadgets & Technology › UK : East : 40 years since official opening of BT Adastral Park Research Centre