ENIAC was made to plot the trajectory for ICBM's to USSR, 80 bytes of memory, I think that is pretty dang impressive for the day. Took up a few floors of a building, but even so. The term bug came from bugs shorting out the valves in ENIAC iirc
Years ago, article on the Cray Computer, also back in the day. The PC of the time of the article was an Intel Celeron CPU, a budget CPU, blew the Cray away. I assume Moores Law is still working
On Sunday, 6 July 2014 5:10 AM, "Jim Saklad jimdoc@icloud.com [iPad]" <iPad@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
> But modern computers can do infinitely more than those early multi-ton monsters and even the first PCs [as in IBM and clones] But even things like word processing and games are beyond the notion if what a computer is supposed to do.
I spent the summer of 1969 at the Manned Spacecraft Center south of Houston. The Apollo flights were managed by several (3 or 5) linked IBM 360/50 mainframe computers, each of which probably had the storage capabilities of an iPhone, but not the speed.
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Jim Saklad mailto:jimdoc@icloud.com
I spent the summer of 1969 at the Manned Spacecraft Center south of Houston. The Apollo flights were managed by several (3 or 5) linked IBM 360/50 mainframe computers, each of which probably had the storage capabilities of an iPhone, but not the speed.
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Jim Saklad mailto:jimdoc@icloud.com
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Posted by: Tony <tdale@xtra.co.nz>
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