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Early core plane memories were made by women weavers. Later, IBM developed a machine to make them - much faster to produce and way cheaper.
Pharma Phil
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Most people have heard the term “core dump”, and some even use it without any idea where that came from. Those old computers worked slow, taking sometimes several days to work on a single program. When a “bug” developed (seriously, bugs shorting out things happened) the computer was stopped, repaired, and a core dump was done. Remember, these magnetic cores kept their data, not like solid state RAM. From the core dump it was determined where the program stopped. And often it could be restarted where it left off, saving having to restart.
Now you know……..Bill
From: neoni...@googlegroups.com [mailto:neoni...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of SWISSNIXIE - Jonathan F.
Sent: Wednesday, May 20, 2020 4:43 PM
To: neonixie-l <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [neonixie-l] OT: Help with mysterious part
Hi guys,
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On 21 May 2020, at 01:28, Bill van Dijk <theold...@gmail.com> wrote:
To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/neonixie-l/015101d62f06%24b5e3c200%2421ab4600%24%40gmail.com.
Great example of core memory.Interesting about the core dump. I guess that would even work after a power failure.IanV
My Wang Labs calculator has a core plane memory for programs. When it did very long calculations, it could be turned off at the end of the day. The next day, you turn it on and a red lamp turns on to remind you that it is still in the middle of a calculation and continues until a result was displayed on it's nixie tube read-outs. So nothing in memory was lost when the power was turned off !. Very cool.
Pharma Phil
---------- Original Message ----------
From: 'Ian Vine' via neonixie-l <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
Date: May 20, 2020 at 10:15 PM
Great example of core memory.
Interesting about the core dump. I guess that would even work after a power failure.
IanV
On 21 May 2020, at 01:28, Bill van Dijk <theold...@gmail.com> wrote:
Most people have heard the term “core dump”, and some even use it without any idea where that came from. Those old computers worked slow, taking sometimes several days to work on a single program. When a “bug” developed (seriously, bugs shorting out things happened) the computer was stopped, repaired, and a core dump was done. Remember, these magnetic cores kept their data, not like solid state RAM. From the core dump it was determined where the program stopped. And often it could be restarted where it left off, saving having to restart.
Now you know........Bill
From: neoni...@googlegroups.com [mailto:neoni...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of SWISSNIXIE - Jonathan F.
Sent: Wednesday, May 20, 2020 4:43 PM
To: neonixie-l <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [neonixie-l] OT: Help with mysterious part
Hi guys,
I know this is kind of OT, but I've noticed that a lot of people here are way older than me, and therefore know more about vintage tech.
This item is sitting around in my house for quite some time, but i have no idea what exactly it is. See attached images. I'm guessing it has something to do with memory. The small dip-looking parts around the device are diodes that look upright and are all connected to a common source. No markings about part number or manufacturer. The structure under the plexi-glass looks like something woven out of wire or a grid or something. It also looks like wires are going into a black material.
Any idea what it is, how old it is, or in what it was used?
Thanks!
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