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Comments on: Memories Of Ages Past https://whynow.dumka.us/2009/07/16/memories-of-ages-past/ On-line Opinion Magazine...OK, it's a blog Sat, 18 Jul 2009 05:12:28 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 By: Bryan https://whynow.dumka.us/2009/07/16/memories-of-ages-past/comment-page-1/#comment-47002 Sat, 18 Jul 2009 05:12:28 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=10118#comment-47002 The crank would have beat the toggle switches on the minis, and the rotaries for hex on the IBM big iron.

Core was certainly more reliable than the tube based systems that were still used for special purposes in the military.

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By: Steve Bates https://whynow.dumka.us/2009/07/16/memories-of-ages-past/comment-page-1/#comment-46998 Sat, 18 Jul 2009 02:51:04 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=10118#comment-46998 Bryan, when you and I started working with computers, all of them used core for memory.

Um, in my case, actually, all but one.

The Rice University Computer, designed and built there, completed… actually, never really completed, but the manual I still have was printed in 1962, used small CRTs with screens mounted against a circle of mica. If I recall correctly, and it’s been a long time, the bits were written in the obvious way… point the electron gun at a particular spot on the mica… and read in a similar fashion, by detecting the discharge when a spot was targeted again for reading. It never worked all that well, and they replaced the system with core at some point, but all the CRTs were still there, present but inoperative, in large Plexiglas cabinets, when I worked there in 1967.

But what can I say about the Rice Computer: it’s also the only computer I’ve ever worked with that had a crank on the front panel, and no, I’m not referring to the operator… in single-step mode, one turn of the crank executed 50 instructions.
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