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  • Hi, I'm Carrie Anne, and welcome to Crash Course Computer Science!

  • We've talked about computer memory several times in this series, and we even designed

  • some in Episode 6.

  • In general, computer memory is non-permanent.

  • If your xbox accidently gets unplugged and turns off, any data saved in memory is lost.

  • For this reason, it's called volatile memory.

  • What we haven't talked so much about this series is storage, which is a tad different.

  • Any data written to storage, like your hard drive, will stay there until it's over-written

  • or deleted, even if the power goes out.

  • It's non-volatile.

  • It used to be that volatile memory was fast and non-volatile storage was slow, but as

  • computing technologies have improved, this distinction is becoming less true, and the

  • terms have started to blend together.

  • Nowadays, we take for granted technologies like this little USB stick, which offers gigabytes

  • of memory, reliable over long periods of time, all at low cost, but this wasn't always true.

  • INTRO

  • The earliest computer storage was paper punch cards, and its close cousin, punched paper tape.

  • By the 1940s, punch cards had largely standardized into a grid of 80 columns and 12 rows, allowing

  • for a maximum of 960 bits of data to be stored on a single card.

  • The largest program ever punched onto cards, that we know of, was the US Military's Semi-Automatic

  • Ground Environment, or SAGE, an Air Defense System that became operational in 1958.

  • The main program was stored on 62,500 punchcards, roughly equivalent to 5 megabytes of data,

  • that's the size of an average smartphone photo today.

  • Punch cards were a useful and popular form of storage for decades, they didn't need

  • power, plus paper was cheap and reasonably durable.

  • However, punchcards were slow and write-once, you can't easily un-punch a hole.

  • So they were a less useful form of memory, where a value might only be needed for a fraction

  • of a second during a program's execution, and then discarded.

  • A faster, larger and more flexible form of computer memory was needed.

  • An early and practical approach was developed by J. Presper Eckert, as he was finishing

  • work on ENIAC in 1944.

  • His invention was called Delay Line Memory, and it worked like this.

  • You take a tube and fill it with a liquid, like mercury.

  • Then, you put a speaker at one end and microphone at the other.

  • When you pulse the speaker, it creates a pressure wave.

  • This takes time to propagate to the other end of the tube, where it hits the microphone,

  • converting it back into an electrical signal.

  • And we can use this propagation delay to store data!

  • Imagine that the presence of a pressure wave is a 1 and the absence of a pressure wave

  • is a 0.

  • Our speaker can output a binary sequence like 1010 0111.

  • The corresponding waves will travel down the tube, in order, and a little while later,

  • hit the microphone, which converts the signal back into 1's and 0's.

  • If we create a circuit that connects the microphone to the speaker, plus a little amplifier to

  • compensate for any loss, we can create a loop that stores data.

  • The signal traveling along the wire is near instantaneous, so there's only ever one

  • bit of data showing at any moment in time.

  • But in the tube, you can store many bits!

  • After working on ENIAC, Eckert and his colleague John Mauchly, set out to build a bigger and

  • better computer called EDVAC, incorporating Delay Line Memory.

  • In total, the computer had 128 Delay Lines, each capable of storing 352 bits.

  • That's a grand total of 45 thousands bits of memory, not too shabby for 1949!

  • This allowed EDVAC to be one of the very earliest Stored-Program Computers, which we talked

  • about in Episode 10.

  • However, a big drawback with delay line memory is that you could only read one bit of data

  • from a tube at any given instant.

  • If you wanted to access a specific bit, like bit 112, you'd have to wait for it to come

  • around in the loop, what's called sequential or cyclic-access memory, whereas we really

  • want random access memory, where we can access any bit at any time.

  • It also proved challenging to increase the density of the memory, packing waves closer

  • together meant they were more easily mixed up.

  • In response, new forms of delay line memory were invented, such as magnetostrictive delay

  • lines.

  • These delay lines use a metal wire that could be twisted, creating little torsional waves

  • that represented data.

  • By forming the wire into a coil, you could store around 1000 bits in a 1 foot by 1 foot square.

  • However, delay line memory was largely obsolete by the mid 1950s, surpassed in performance,

  • reliability and cost by a new kid on the block: magnetic core memory which was constructed

  • out of little magnetic donuts, called cores.

  • If you loop a wire around this core…. and run an electrical current through the wire,

  • we can magnetize the core in a certain direction.

  • If we turn the current off, the core will stay magnetized.

  • If we pass current through the wire in the opposite direction, the magnetization direction,

  • called polarity, flips the other way.

  • In this way, we can store 1's and 0's!

  • 1 bit of memory isn't very useful, so these little donuts were arranged into grids.

  • There were wires for selecting the right row and column, and a wire that ran through every

  • core, which could be used to read or write a bit.

  • Here is an actual piece of core memory!

  • In each of these little yellow squares, there are 32 rows and 32 columns of tiny cores,

  • each one holding 1 bit of data.

  • So, each of these yellow squares could hold 1024 bits.

  • In total, there are 9 of these, so this memory board could hold a maximum of 9216 bits, which

  • is around 9 kilobytes.

  • The first big use of core memory was MIT's Whirlwind 1 computer, in 1953, which used

  • a 32 by 32 core arrangement.

  • And, instead of just a single plane of cores, like this, it was 16 boards deep, providing

  • roughly 16 thousand bits of storage.

  • Importantly, unlike delay line memory, any bit could be accessed at any time.

  • This was a killer feature, and magnetic core memory became the predominant Random Access

  • Memory technology for two decades, beginning in the mid 1950s even though it was typically

  • woven by hand!

  • Although starting at roughly 1 dollar per bit, the cost fell to around 1 cent per bit

  • by the 1970s.

  • Unfortunately, even 1 cent per bit isn't cheap enough for storage.

  • As previously mentioned, an average smartphone photo is around 5 megabytes in size, that's

  • roughly 40 million bits.

  • Would you pay 4 hundred thousand dollars to store a photo on core memory?

  • If you have that kind of money to drop, did you know that Crash Course is on Patreon?

  • Right?

  • Wink wink.

  • Anyway, there was tremendous research into storage technologies happening at this time.

  • By 1951, Eckert and Mauchly had started their own company, and designed a new computer called

  • UNIVAC, one of the earliest commercially sold computers.

  • It debuted with a new form of computer storage: magnetic tape.

  • This was a long, thin and flexible strip of magnetic material, stored in reels.

  • The tape could be moved forwards or backwards inside of a machine called a tape drive.

  • Inside is a write head, which passes current through a wound wire to generate a magnetic

  • field, causing a small section of the tape to become magnetized.

  • The direction of the current sets the polarity, again, perfect for storing 1's and 0's.

  • There was also a separate read head could detect the polarity non-destructively.

  • The UNIVAC used half-inch-wide tape with 8 parallel data tracks, each able to store 128

  • bits of data per inch.

  • With each reel containing 1200 feet of tape, it meant you could store roughly 15 million

  • bitsthat's almost 2 megabytes!

  • Although tape drives were expensive, the magnetic tape itself was cheap and compact, and for

  • this reason, they're still used today for archiving data.

  • The main drawback is access speed.

  • Tape is inherently sequential, you have to rewind or fast-forward to get to data you

  • want.

  • This might mean traversing hundreds of feet of tape to retrieve a single byte, which is

  • slow.

  • A related popular technology in the 1950s and 60s was Magnetic Drum Memory.

  • This was a metal cylindercalled a drumcoated in a magnetic material for recording data.

  • The drum was rotated continuously, and positioned along its length were dozens of read and write heads.

  • These would wait for the right spot to rotate underneath them to read or write a bit of data.

  • To keep this delay as short as possible, drums were rotated thousand of revolutions per minute!

  • By 1953, when the technology started to take off, you could buy units able to record 80,000

  • bits of datathat's 10 kilobytes, but the manufacture of drums ceased in the 1970s.

  • However, Magnetic Drums did directly lead to the development of Hard Disk Drives, which

  • are very similar, but use a different geometric configuration.

  • Instead of large cylinder, hard disks use, welldisksthat are hard.

  • Hence the name!

  • The storage principle is the same, the surface of a disk is magnetic, allowing write and

  • read heads to store and retrieve 1's and 0's.

  • The great thing about disks is that they are thin, so you can stack many of them together,

  • providing a lot of surface area for data storage.

  • That's exactly what IBM did for the world's first computer with a disk drive: the RAMAC 305.

  • Sweet name BTW.

  • It contained fifty, 24-inch diameter disks, offering a total storage capacity of roughly

  • 5 megabytes.Yess!!

  • We've finally gotten to a technology that can store a single smartphone photo!

  • The year was 1956.

  • To access any bit of data, a read/write head would travel up or down the stack to the right

  • disk, and then slide in between them.

  • Like drum memory, the disks are spinning, so the head has to wait for the right section

  • to come around.

  • The RAMAC 305 could access any block of data, on average, in around 6/10ths of a second,

  • what's called the seek time.

  • While great for storage, this was not nearly fast enough for memory, so the RAMAC 305 also

  • had drum memory and magnetic core memory.

  • This is an example of a memory hierarchy, where you have a little bit of fast memory,

  • which is expensive, slightly more medium-speed memory, which is less expensive, and then

  • a lot of slowish memory, which is cheap.

  • This mixed approach strikes a balance between cost and speed.

  • Hard disk drives rapidly improved and became commonplace by the 1970s.

  • A hard disk like this can easily hold 1 terabyte of data todaythat's a trillion bytes

  • or roughly 200,000 five megabyte photos!

  • And these types of drives can be bought online for as little as 40 US dollars.

  • That's 0.0000000005 cents per bit.

  • A huge improvement over core memory's 1 cent per bit!

  • Also, modern drives have an average seek time of under 1/100th of a second.

  • I should also briefly mention a close cousin of hard disks, the floppy disk, which is basically

  • the same thing, but uses a magnetic medium that's, floppy.

  • You might recognise it as the save icon on some of your applications, but it was once

  • a real physical object!

  • It was most commonly used for portable storage, and became near ubiquitous from the mid 1970s

  • up to the mid 90s.

  • And today it makes a pretty good coaster.

  • Higher density floppy disks, like Zip Disks, became popular in the mid 1990s, but fell

  • out of favor within a decade.

  • Optical storage came onto the scene in 1972, in the form of a 12-inchlaser disc.”

  • However, you are probably more familiar with its later, smaller, are more popular cousin,

  • the Compact Disk, or CD, as well as the DVD which took off in the 90s.

  • Functionally, these technologies are pretty similar to hard disks and floppy disks, but

  • instead of storing data magnetically, optical disks have little physical divots in their

  • surface that cause light to be reflected differently, which is captured by an optical sensor, and

  • decoded into 1's and 0's.

  • However, today, things are moving to solid state technologies, with no moving parts,

  • like this hard drive and also this USB stick.

  • Inside are Integrated Circuits, which we talked about in Episode 15.

  • The first RAM integrated circuits became available in 1972 at 1 cent per bit, quickly making

  • magnetic core memory obsolete.

  • Today, costs have fallen so far, that hard disk drives are being replaced with non-volatile,

  • Solid State Drives, or SSDs, as the cool kids say.

  • Because they contain no moving parts, they don't really have to seek anywhere, so SSD

  • access times are typically under 1/1000th of a second.

  • That's fast!

  • But it's still many times slower than your computer's RAM.

  • For this reason, computers today still use memory hierarchies.

  • So, we've come along way since the 1940s.

  • Much like transistor count and Moore's law, which we talked about in Episode 14, memory

  • and storage technologies have followed a similar exponential trend.

  • From early core memory costing millions of dollars per megabyte, we're steadily fallen,

  • to mere cents by 2000, and only fractions of a cent today.

  • Plus, there's WAY less punch cards to keep track of.

  • Seriously, can you imagine if there was a slight breeze in that room containing the

  • SAGE program?

  • 62,500 punch cards.

  • I don't even want to think about it.

  • I'll see you next week.

Hi, I'm Carrie Anne, and welcome to Crash Course Computer Science!

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