In September 1956 IBM launched the 305 RAMAC, the first computer with a hard disk drive (HDD).
The HDD weighed over a ton and stored 5MB of data.
Let us start appreciating our 4 GB finger-size flash drives...
In September 1956 IBM launched the 305 RAMAC, the first computer with a hard disk drive (HDD).
The HDD weighed over a ton and stored 5MB of data.
Let us start appreciating our 4 GB finger-size flash drives...
Here's another oldie: The FASTRAND II, circa 1968 weighed 2.25 tons and had a capacity of 88 MB. It was used with the UNIVAC 1108 series....
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It looks bigger than my apartment...![]()
Last edited by jholland1964; 01-17-2007 at 11:12 AM.
Hey everything electronic or "technical" used to be huge! I remember as a kid our neighbors had the first color tv on the block...we all gathered at their house that first Sunday night to watch Bonanza...which was one of the very few color programs even on tv at the time. Their TV was huge, or at least looked huge to me at the time. I would bet the screen was probably no bigger than 19" though but the entire set itself was gigantic. They also had one of the first home stereo systems...speakers the size of a small refrigerator and you could hear every scratch or piece of dust on the....record...yes...an LP record...which probably held about 12 songs and we all ooohed and aaahed at the great sound. Today we have tv's that fit on your wall like a picture frame and has a clearer picture than looking out a window. An iPod can fit in your shirt pocket, hold hundreds of songs and has speakers smaller than hearing aids and deliver sound so clean and pure you feel like you are sitting in a concert hall...amazing!
Heck, my Uncle had one of the first microwave ovens I had seen and it was also gigantic, he had to build a table to sit it on...it was the size of an igloo cooler! Now they fit on small trays or up under your cabinets.
Last edited by jholland1964; 01-17-2007 at 11:23 AM.
ROFL!! Y'all are making me feel young here....
"Best to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt."
"Honesty is the First Chapter in the Book of Wisdom" - Thomas Jefferson
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Hey, I never said I was a "spring chicken"...I honestly remember when my parents bought their first tv...1952, I was 6 years old. They went together with my Uncle to buy a tv because NBC announced they were going to broadcast the Democrat and Republican Conventions that coming summer...honest...that is the only reason they bought a tv! We had TWO channels then! That was all, no more. I am sure the picture was snowy, but it sure looked amazing to us!
I didn't say that was bad...I only remember reading articles about that stuff......I've been around since the days of the 100MB 3.5" IDE drives....
"Best to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt."
"Honesty is the First Chapter in the Book of Wisdom" - Thomas Jefferson
Desktop:
AMD Phenom II x6 1100T @ 3.3Ghz
MSi 890FXA-GD70
16GB G.Skill DDR3-1600
Asus HD6950 2GB GDDR5 PCI-Ex16
4x 1.5TB WD SATA w/64MB cache in RAID10
2x Asus 22x DVD/CD +/-RW DL SATA
Rosewill Xtreme Series 950W PSU
2x 23" 5ms Asus Widescreen LCD
Laptop:
15" Aluminum MacBook Pro
Intel Core 2 Duo 2.53Ghz
4GB DDR3 @ 1067MHz
320GB SATA 7200RPM HDD
**View My Forum**
Dude, that is still around today!! that is not even old enough to refer as 'the good old days', more like 'good old 2003/2004'...
Judy, we didn't get colour TV till the late 70s, even till early 80s there was only 1 channel and it blew chunks! the only thing I cared about back those days were Flintstones and Laurel & Hardy!
I got my first PC (if you can even call it that) in Spring of 1983, a Commodore 64K (don't wanna know what K stands for Gizmo, those who only know Megas and Gigas wouldn't dig it).
I was loading programs and games from cassettes....the main problem with loading programs this way was the misaligned head of the tape reader which required fine-tunning using a small screw driver to adjust it.
A few months of gaming and I started hacking into games at age 12 using a program called 'FreezeFrame', I think that was the name...less than a year later I made my first game (I believe the programming language was based on some form of Basic or Pascal). It was a 370-line side-scroller....lol.
~TL![]()
My Dad bought his first color tv in 1968, I was all ready married. He "allegedly" bought it so we could enjoy the Winter Olympics in color! Plus my husband was off in Viet Nam and I was expecting our first daughter and Dad "said" it would help me pass the time...my Dad was cheap, he always had to have a good reason to do something...guess the Winter Olympics was a good enough reason and helping me keep my mind off the war was too...didn't help, just brought the Tet Offensive, Live and In Color right into the living room!
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