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From: "Jim Hampton" on Fri 22 Jul 2005 04:00
wrote in message roups.com... From: Jim Hampton on Jul 21, 9:21 pm wrote in message From: Jim Hampton on Jul 21, 3:44 pm "an_old_friend" wrote in message Hello, Len [ on memory in digital stuff ] They don't call it "random" for nothing ![]() RANDOM access memory is a term that came from the prehistory days of computing such as the magnetic drum memory, a sort of electromechanical version of a shift register. The F-106 interceptor fire control system [by Hughes] had a vacuum tube digital computer with a magnetic drum memory, circa 1957. I was in on environmental testing of that fire control system at Hughes, primarily the radar and missle launch control parts. The first mass memory things were magnetic tape transports, then "hard" magneitc disks in addition to somewhat large solid-state shift registers. All of those had to go through an ordered sequence of data storage to reach the desired data. RANDOM access memory took a while to develop manufacturing processes for large memory storage on a chip. RAM is like the old "crossbar" telephone switching that enables control of the exact "position" of data storage at will. No sequencing through other data to get to what you want. Put a micro$oft operating system with it and you have a perfect random machine. The only thing "wrong" with Microsoft is that Bill Gates and Paul Allen got into the monopoly business FIRST. :-) Everyone else bitches and moans about MS because they didn't get all the megabucks. shrug I'm just getting started on actual Windows programming and have come to appreciate the enormous flexibility/programmability of the Windows32 system. There's a lot more to it than just some flashy GUI and it has enormous potential beyond the booring PR squibs in the newsstand magazines on "computing." What ever happened to bubble memory? With my beer intake, I have a reasonable fascimile of bubble memory. Magnetic bubble memory, splashy though it was in countless little PR squibs, just never got into reliable nanosecond read/write times nor did the manufacturing process result in high yields of really MASS memory. Bubble memory went flat when the FLASH and extraordinary- low keep-alive power CMOS memory technologies were developed. Had it been brewed in Milwaukee it might have had a chance. FLASH memory technology packages have been built by the MILLIONS and now used all over the world in everything from TV sets to lawn sprinkler controllers to modern ham HF-VHF-UHF transceivers. CMOS technology went a couple of plateau magnitudes farther and resulted in nanosecond-speed digital gates with zilch standby power requirements as well as huge, huge capacity RAM. The little watch-fob size "USB disk" portable memory things use up to half a Gigabyte of CMOS RAM and plug into a USB port for mass transfer of data. The same things are used in digital cameras...motion picture cameras that eliminate the need for a magnetic tape cartridge storage (you can get those for under $300 at Good Guys or Best Buy)! Brian Woods' DZ Sienna (and its no-longer-on-sale PSKUBE) use a single-board PC made by another company. Easily enough RAM and ROM on that small plug-in PC-on-a-single-board to hold a half-Gigabyte RAM plus peripheral interface circuitry to do the Sienna controlling, internal DSP, whatevers, plus whatever a clever user can adapt (programs written and developed on any standard PC). Those single-board-PC plug-ins are used in the electronics industry in all kinds of things, built by at least a couple dozen USA companies...plus more available from off- shore designer-makers. There's even more microcontroller and microprocessor hardware-software on the market from USA companies, UK companies, Asian companies for everything from robotics hobby thingies to appliance and precision instrument control...including at least three monthly periodicals covering just the subject of hobby robotics. Hobby robotics is an activity area which has had extraordinary growth and mainly involves "simple" electronics of the digital kind...but is adapted with all sorts of home-grown programming of the PIC and Atmel microcontrollers. Microchip Corporation here in the southwest has shown a phenomenal growth pattern over the last decade plus. They make the PIC series of microcontrollers...plus both CMOS and FLASH memory plus (now) many kinds of interface devices for use with their PICs. Economical prices without scrimping on function or processing speed. [see Allied, DigiKey, Newark, Mouser catalogs for listings] Withoutadoubt the BIGGEST use of on-off keyed CW "rigs" is the keyless auto lock (key fob transmitter) for autos. Made by the millions, in use today in the millions, damn good security, "sends" and "receives" at rates far above the ability of the best-trained, most-experienced USN radio operator! :-) Far more keyless auto locks now than the sum total of all "CW" radios put together in the history of radio. [no, one can't "work DX" on those "CW" "rigs" but it enables one to get in a vehicle to GO where lots of that DX is located...] [similarly, you can't get the security with a "CW" ham rig to open a car or start the ignition or even open a garage door...it ain't fast enough and the "CW op" can't do the math to set or decode that kind of code] Little battery inside is said to be good for five years of "normal use" in the Chebby Malibu MAXX my wife and I got three weeks ago. Love it! Love that "control panel" on it and all its features, all possible with microcontrollers and digital devices and sensors all over the car. Drives well, too. :-) |
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