I've been having fun looking at TV programs that I
watched when the
 family had a 17" monochrome RCA set.  At any rate, here's one such
 about a guy who gets shocked by a computer:
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-pfWhehSB4
 Note that, about 3:20 in, the guy doing the troubleshooting on the
 system pulls a faulty tube and gives it to his companion for
 replacement.  "12AY7" is what he says, but hands the other guy an
 octal tube--the 12AY7 is a 9-pin sub-miniature.  (TV had goofs even
 then). Other than the IBM Model B electric typewriters, there doesn't
 seem to be much to see.  From 1955.
 Here's another one from 1956:
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33OFJEWUgQE
 This involves a mechanical translating machine that's been adapted to
 diagnose and prescribe treatment for diseases.  There, you can see the
 same IBM typewriters, as well a couple of keypunches (IBM 024/6?) and
 bunches of tape drives that I don't recognize. "Memory coils", anyone?
  The strange thing is that years later, I met up with a fellow who had
 worked with Gerald Salton on the nascent SMART system that, I believe,
 eventually morphed into MEDLARS.
 Stuff from a time when men wore hats and women wore dresses.
 --Chuck 
Looks like a Bendix G15 at about 2:03 in the second video.
--
Vintage computers and electronics