Computer History Museum 2005 (Part 1 of 3)

December 21st, 2009 | by computermemory |
johnb10000 asked:


WISC - Wisconsin Integrated Software Catalog UNIVAC I Mercury Delay Line Memory JOHNIAC computer SAGE - Semi Automatic Ground Environment Sabre (computer system) Colossus Mark 2 —- Part 2 —- Minuteman I Missile Guidance Computer computer memory and storage Router (Interface message processor) IBM 1401 CPU IBM 1402 Card reader IBM 1403 Printer IBM 360 Zuse’s Z3 Computer First Google production server Apollo Guidance Computer —- Part 3 —- Interface Message Processor (First router …

computer memory testing

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  1. 13 Responses to “Computer History Museum 2005 (Part 1 of 3)”

  2. By x246869 on Dec 23, 2009 | Reply

    My 1’st job was development on a Honeywell (GE-Bull) 5k computer. Worth about 200,000$.
    We upgraded to the max memory of 10k about a year after startup.
    Not all that bad, since 10k was in words and not bytes :)

  3. By badatcards on Dec 23, 2009 | Reply

    When my computer is idle I use it to for team HardwareCanucksForum ( 54196) GO CANADA :) looking for a team.please join all welcome.

  4. By emailsantu on Dec 25, 2009 | Reply

    wtf
    Nothing to view on his face

  5. By gattacadream on Dec 26, 2009 | Reply

    Forget about your buttons. Great job. I really enjoyed listening to you. Great job.

    We want more !!!

  6. By johnb10000 on Dec 27, 2009 | Reply

    The is caused by getting up early on a weekend, getting dressed fast and rushing over to the museum. Nobody mentioned the buttons were wrong and I found out when I started editing.

  7. By P1X1E56 on Dec 27, 2009 | Reply

    We are not angry that you have a piece of the original Colossos because we have a working Colossos. Check out Bletchley Park’s web site.

  8. By Borin81 on Dec 30, 2009 | Reply

    i spot a PET!

  9. By RyanPridgeon on Jan 1, 2010 | Reply

    I used an enigma; incredibly clever machine for the age. It actually used a wiring system where you could put in a number, and it would wire each letter to another depending on the number, so as long as you had the number you cuold decode the messagess.

  10. By JimTheMingebag on Jan 4, 2010 | Reply

    haha *** i have no idea

  11. By gattacadream on Jan 7, 2010 | Reply

    Very good explanation. He really understands the computer evolution. thanks for uploading.

  12. By gattacadream on Jan 8, 2010 | Reply

    Great video, really interesting but i can t help wondering why the old guy wears a shirt with the buttons attached wrongly.

  13. By IGWOS on Jan 11, 2010 | Reply

    Awsome cool stuff. I have to get there sometime. IGWOS

  14. By qzappp on Jan 13, 2010 | Reply

    Awesome tour John and Chris… Thanks for putting this up!

Sorry, comments for this entry are closed at this time.