šŸ“° NEW YORK POST

Tokyo museum offers visitors ‘flashback’ to defunct technology

Tucked away in a corner of central Tokyo, the Extinct Media Museum lives up to its name.

From Betacam videotapes to floppy disks and vintage Sony devices, the museum is a showcase for old cameras and telecom equipment, including a 1916 Japanese-made ā€œLilyā€ still camera, its oldest exhibit.

Amidst the three-roomed museum’s cluttered shelves, visitors like 59-year-old Mika Matsuda can rewind to the past and the gadgets that were once in everyday use.

Old camera models are displayed at Extinct Media Museum, a private museum showcasing a collection of defunct gadgets, including old cameras, cassette tapes, and cell phones, in Tokyo, Japan, on Jan. 11, 2025. REUTERS

ā€œIt is fascinating not only for generations unfamiliar with these items, but also for those who lived through those times,ā€ Matsuda said on Saturday.

ā€œSeeing these pieces feels like I’m having a flashback of our own lives. It reminded me of how things were back then — I used to have so much fun,ā€ she said.

Opened in January 2023, the museum was founded on the belief that all media equipment, except for paper and stone, will eventually ā€œdie out,ā€ explained deputy museum curator Barbara Asuka.

The mostly donated items are displayed so that visitors can pick them up, encouraging a full sensory experience, she added.

ā€œThere’s a lot of information you can gain by holding it, like the smell,ā€ Asuka said.

Deputy curator Barbara Asuka checks the condition of the ā€˜Pathe-Baby’ (9.5mm film) hand-cranked image camera, the oldest film camera in the collection of Extinct Media Museum in Tokyo, Japan, on Jan. 11, 2025. REUTERS

ā€œWe want visitors to experience these items with all five senses rather than just looking at the display through glass,ā€ said Asuka.

The museum regularly accepts donations from museum-goers like Hisashi Ito, who brought in a small hand-held watch and cassette tapes from his personal collection on Saturday.

ā€œEven if I keep these gadgets at home, they will probably just be thrown away when I die,ā€ the 56-year-old car designer said.

Old model cell phones are displayed at Extinct Media Museum. REUTERS
Visitors view items inside Extinct Media Museum, a private museum showcasing a collection of defunct gadgets including old cameras, cassette tapes and cell phones. REUTERS

ā€œIt’s better to share them and let people enjoy them.ā€

The Extinct Media Museum’s hours vary, according to its website.

General admission is priced at around 2,000 yen ($12.70).

Tickets for donors and students are 1,000 yen.

($1 = 157.6900 yen)


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