Primitive Memories : 無料・フリー素材/写真
Primitive Memories / jurvetson
ライセンス | クリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示 2.1 |
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説明 | One of the core memory boards hanging in our office collection… the industry standard for computer memory in the 1960’s. Here you see 18 bytes of memory in 2x3 inches, where each hand-woven ferrite ring can be individually magnetized or not, representing 1 or 0.Until I took this macro zoom shot, I had not noticed the unusual wiring for the cores on the left. The wiring on the right is standard to core memory arrays (to read and write a magnetic bit to the iron core at the intersection of a particular row and address line).The core memory arrays would often have parity bits for each data row (for error detection). Perhaps the wiring on the left implements a parity operation. It has repeating loops across pairs of rows. Does this look familiar to anyone?(The only marking on the 7x9” board is Xak 4292. It has 300 bits in the memory array, with 15 pairs of rows with 10 ferrite cores in each row.) |
撮影日 | 2005-02-03 19:10:27 |
撮影者 | jurvetson , Los Altos, USA |
タグ | |
撮影地 | |
カメラ | EX-Z55 , CASIO COMPUTER CO.,LTD |
露出 | 0.017 sec (1/60) |
開放F値 | f/2.6 |