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  3. HLOTD (History lesson of the day)

HLOTD (History lesson of the day)

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  • L Offline
    L Offline
    Lost User
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

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    • L Lost User

      This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

      R Offline
      R Offline
      R Giskard Reventlov
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      Imagine the laptop that went into! :-)

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      • L Lost User

        This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

        L Offline
        L Offline
        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        The first one I worked on was the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNIVAC_FASTRAND[^] in 1967. Looked like two sections of sewage pipe one above the other, and hummed to itself all day (and night). The best thing about it was that you could hide behind it for hours.

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        • R R Giskard Reventlov

          Imagine the laptop that went into! :-)

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          L Offline
          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          I am old enough to remember a time when a hard drive was a long trip over bad roads! :)

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          • L Lost User

            I am old enough to remember a time when a hard drive was a long trip over bad roads! :)

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            R Offline
            R Giskard Reventlov
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Sadly, as do I! :)

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            • L Lost User

              This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

              A Offline
              A Offline
              Amarnath S
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              Still remember working on the DEC 10 system in 1987, perhaps one of the first ones to be installed in Bangalore, India at the Indian Telephone Industries (ITI). Faintly remember that the storage device there was a magnetic tape drive. While writing programs (in FORTRAN then), it occasionally used to throw this message: "System shutting down in 5 minutes. Please save your files", followed by a countdown, till shutdown. Early versions of Windows used to do it best - throw up a BSOD :-)

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              • L Lost User

                This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

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                Z Offline
                zephaneas
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                They're installing it as a Flight Data Recorder on that plane

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                • A Amarnath S

                  Still remember working on the DEC 10 system in 1987, perhaps one of the first ones to be installed in Bangalore, India at the Indian Telephone Industries (ITI). Faintly remember that the storage device there was a magnetic tape drive. While writing programs (in FORTRAN then), it occasionally used to throw this message: "System shutting down in 5 minutes. Please save your files", followed by a countdown, till shutdown. Early versions of Windows used to do it best - throw up a BSOD :-)

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  My first computer experience was in South Africa on a Raytheon RDS500 in the early 1970s. It had 4 Kilobytes of ferrite core memory and for fun I wrote a little Fortran program to calculate prime numbers. I became addicted to damn computers!

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                  • L Lost User

                    This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

                    G Offline
                    G Offline
                    Gaurav Aroraa
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    Respect for International Business Machine (IBM)

                    Gaurav Arora http://gaurav-arora.com

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                    • L Lost User

                      My first computer experience was in South Africa on a Raytheon RDS500 in the early 1970s. It had 4 Kilobytes of ferrite core memory and for fun I wrote a little Fortran program to calculate prime numbers. I became addicted to damn computers!

                      A Offline
                      A Offline
                      Amarnath S
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      Cornelius Henning wrote:

                      calculate prime numbers

                      Yes - those were our favourite programs - with others being implementations of the Newton Raphson method, Regula Falsi method, Simpson's rule and Gaussian Quadrature for numerical integration. One other interesting program we wrote was called "Odd Order Equisum Square", just another name for a magic square program.

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                      • L Lost User

                        This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

                        P Offline
                        P Offline
                        Pualee
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        Weren't those called "microprocessors" or something back then? ;P

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                        • L Lost User

                          The first one I worked on was the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNIVAC_FASTRAND[^] in 1967. Looked like two sections of sewage pipe one above the other, and hummed to itself all day (and night). The best thing about it was that you could hide behind it for hours.

                          O Offline
                          O Offline
                          OldTomas
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          I worked around Fastrands for seven years or so. There was one just across the hall from my office, in the machine room. The horror! I never heard of one crashing through a wall ... I did hear of a Fastrand, secured in its special wheeled moving rig, roll down a sloped corridor, zip through the reception area and then out the front door to the parking lot. I don't know if there were any hardware or wetware casualties from the incident.

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                          • R R Giskard Reventlov

                            Imagine the laptop that went into! :-)

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                            G Offline
                            Gary Wheeler
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            What do you think that big silver thing was in the background?

                            Software Zen: delete this;

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                            • G Gary Wheeler

                              What do you think that big silver thing was in the background?

                              Software Zen: delete this;

                              R Offline
                              R Offline
                              R Giskard Reventlov
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: Very good!

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                              • O OldTomas

                                I worked around Fastrands for seven years or so. There was one just across the hall from my office, in the machine room. The horror! I never heard of one crashing through a wall ... I did hear of a Fastrand, secured in its special wheeled moving rig, roll down a sloped corridor, zip through the reception area and then out the front door to the parking lot. I don't know if there were any hardware or wetware casualties from the incident.

                                L Offline
                                L Offline
                                Lost User
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                Yes, we all 'heard' about that story.

                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • L Lost User

                                  This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

                                  I Offline
                                  I Offline
                                  iProgramIt
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  ;P ;P That is crazy man!

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                                  • O OldTomas

                                    I worked around Fastrands for seven years or so. There was one just across the hall from my office, in the machine room. The horror! I never heard of one crashing through a wall ... I did hear of a Fastrand, secured in its special wheeled moving rig, roll down a sloped corridor, zip through the reception area and then out the front door to the parking lot. I don't know if there were any hardware or wetware casualties from the incident.

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Member 10707677
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    I remember a similar incident when the San Jose Mercury News installed a new HP3000 system. Standard installation involved a 24-hour spinup on the hard drives. The computer room was not complete, so the back wall consisted of industrial plastic sheeting. 17 hours into the spinup, the technicians checked the status of the drives. Drives 0-4 showed no faults, drive 5 showed a minor fault that registered 11 hours into the test. During the physical part of the check, the technicians discovered that the minor fault was due to the disk drive taking a tour out the back wall, colliding with a conveyor system used to deliver newspapers to the trucks, ending on its side and continuing the rigorous series of checks with only the minor fault.

                                    The difficult may take time, the impossible a little longer.

                                    L 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • M Member 10707677

                                      I remember a similar incident when the San Jose Mercury News installed a new HP3000 system. Standard installation involved a 24-hour spinup on the hard drives. The computer room was not complete, so the back wall consisted of industrial plastic sheeting. 17 hours into the spinup, the technicians checked the status of the drives. Drives 0-4 showed no faults, drive 5 showed a minor fault that registered 11 hours into the test. During the physical part of the check, the technicians discovered that the minor fault was due to the disk drive taking a tour out the back wall, colliding with a conveyor system used to deliver newspapers to the trucks, ending on its side and continuing the rigorous series of checks with only the minor fault.

                                      The difficult may take time, the impossible a little longer.

                                      L Offline
                                      L Offline
                                      Lost User
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #18

                                      Member 10707677 wrote:

                                      the disk drive taking a tour out the back wall, colliding with a conveyor system ...

                                      While magically still being connected to its power supply and data cables.

                                      M 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • L Lost User

                                        Member 10707677 wrote:

                                        the disk drive taking a tour out the back wall, colliding with a conveyor system ...

                                        While magically still being connected to its power supply and data cables.

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Member 10707677
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #19

                                        Distance travelled to back wall, 3 feet. Distance from computer room to conveyor system, 4 feet. The drive hit the belt and toppled with 1-2 feet down the length of the conveyor. These were the old Perkins eight-platter 18-inch drives, designed for use onboard naval vessels. Cables were typically 60 feet long, with the excess coiled under the floor of the computer room. If I hadn't seen it myself, I wouldn't have believed it possible. The techs shut down the drive and gave it a thorough going-over. The only damage was a ding in the base cabinet. Luckily, the drive was designated a standby reserve, so the whole of the installation wasn't too badly affected by the extra testing of the drive. (This time, the techs remembered to lock the drive cabinet in place.)

                                        The difficult may take time, the impossible a little longer.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • L Lost User

                                          This is the world's first hard drive, invented by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping 5 Megabytes of data. Picture taken in 1956. [First hard drive]

                                          H Offline
                                          H Offline
                                          hevisko
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #20

                                          I've heard about "walking" harddrives, as those things' heads (when in sync) would make them move across the floor... tlak about "system is running"

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