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Manufacturing 1A and 2B ESS Memory - AT&T Archives 

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A film made at the Hawthorne Works in Illinois, for Western Electric Hawthorne Works employees, and possibly for system administrators around the country. This black-and-white film was shot with a semi-fisheye lens, and has two parts:
1. How the memory module works (8 minutes)
2. How the memory module is made at Hawthorne Works (12 minutes)
The subject of What a Memory! is the memory modules for the 1A ESS (Electronic Switching System) and 2B ESS. These, as of 1976, were the Bell System's state-of-the-art modules, utilizing electronic reed relays to switch calls. The relays - ferried or remreed switches - consisted of a grid with copper tape loops in one direction, and twisted wire in the other, similar to the magnetic core memory of an early computer. The reed relays were short-lived at Western Electric - semiconductor switching (using integrated circuits) was introduced the following year, in 1977.
The 1A ESS was introduced into service in 1976 in Illinois. It had a capacity of 128,000 phone lines, and was intended for high-traffic urban areas.
The 2B ESS had its first installation in Georgia in February of 1976. This ESS took up seven 18" deep by 26" wide equipment bays, a third of the size of the No. 2 ESS. It could handle 19,000 calls per hour, and then improvements the following year in software and hardware doubled that to 38,000.
Footage Courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ

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4 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 38   
@user2C47
@user2C47 4 года назад
Fun fact: Centrex once had a bug which would allow an unlimited number of parties to be added to a call.
@NortelGeek
@NortelGeek 4 года назад
I think I remember hearing Evan Doorbell doing a demonstration of that bug. I grew up in the age of Meridian Digital Centrex, though, so I never got to play with regular Centrex.
@gregercolano8032
@gregercolano8032 4 года назад
Her voice really does sound like all the AT&T voice announcements I used to hear in the 70's/80's, from error messages to time of day. Definitely has those same voice inflections, and her voice delivery is perfect, but seems not at home in front of the camera. Could be Jane Barbe? I'm no expert, but that voice.. a dead ringer if it isn't her!
@NortelGeek
@NortelGeek 4 года назад
No, this isn't Jane, I'm afraid. Also, Jane did have a certain southern "softness" to her voice that just isn't heard from this presenter, who has a somewhat nasal quality and I'm guessing is from Illinois or Ohio. Jane was from Atlanta.
@johneygd
@johneygd 8 лет назад
Respect to those workers from the past!!!
@playswithlife
@playswithlife 12 лет назад
Very nice! Love these old computer tech videos.
@davidjames666
@davidjames666 3 года назад
@13:21 the same tools used to build a memory chip back then are used to replace my head gaskets on my BMW today!! you know that computer is going to be big
@Zylstra555
@Zylstra555 11 лет назад
Digging the music.
@diamonddave45
@diamonddave45 11 лет назад
This video is also historic as it shows that early small production videos were done in black & white as video cameras were still expensive and difficult to produce.
@kd1s
@kd1s 7 лет назад
Well - interesting how they went with magnetic memory. I know at one point they played with Williams tubes, flying spot etc. But those must have been too expensive. And consider - we now use capacitive memories and some magnetic memory on our computers and devices.
@OverKillPlusOne
@OverKillPlusOne 7 лет назад
kd1s density was the primary factor. Cost and reliability. No other technology at the time approached the density and reliability.
@kd1s
@kd1s 7 лет назад
Yeah - capacitive RAM didn't happen until the late 1960's.
@stuffnva
@stuffnva 4 года назад
Memory cards were used in #1 ESS. IA ESS did not have them.
@douro20
@douro20 11 лет назад
The person you're thinking of was Jane Barbe...but i'm not sure this was her...
@donmoore7785
@donmoore7785 Год назад
So this technology lasted only a year or two, replaced by integrated circuits. Wild.
@RetroVintageItems27
@RetroVintageItems27 12 лет назад
Very interesting, my grandpa worked at Controal Data (early computer company) which made super computers. He told me how expensive ram was, for a tiny amount (by todays standers).
@MrWolfTickets
@MrWolfTickets 11 лет назад
This is a great example of the inverse correlation between New technology and total labor requirements. Thanks for the video. Btw, does anyone know if this video is in black and white because that was still cheaper to produce even into the 70s?
@JJVernig
@JJVernig 2 года назад
I have a feeling this is shot with video instead of film. The semi-pro equipment for business and education purposes was still mainly black and white in those days. Especially the camera's for colour were prohibitive expensive and could run into tens of thousands dollars without much advantages..
@protektwar
@protektwar 5 лет назад
"She doesn't really need to be very intelligent" ... what the actual heck?!
@bklynp718
@bklynp718 4 года назад
Yeah, I noticed that too. I was a switchboard operator - definitely not a job for dummies.
@NortelGeek
@NortelGeek 4 года назад
@@bklynp718 I was an operator at BellSouth. Training was 6 weeks long. Definitely not a job for a dummy. At the time, the console alone reminded me of something out of NASA. The pay, now THAT was just enough for a "dummy" lol. Great benefits though. You definitely don't see that anymore.
@bklynp718
@bklynp718 4 года назад
@@NortelGeek Do you still have nightmares that the board is ringing but you can't answer it?
@NortelGeek
@NortelGeek 4 года назад
@@bklynp718 Haha, I've never had that one (I guess because our consoles auto-answered and gave us a zip tone), but there was a few instances where I was awakened at home and answered my phone with a groggy "Op'radr." 😂 What kind of board did you work at?
@bklynp718
@bklynp718 4 года назад
@@NortelGeekI used to do that when I still had a home phone, which I got rid of almost 20 years ago. I worked at a small answering service, mostly doctors and rich people, with four cord boards. They could all split when it was busy to accommodate 8 operators, but my favorite was the overnight shift when I had all four to myself. It did get busy sometimes earlier in the night and closer to the next shift. Fun. Oh, I was also working at the hospital as switchboard operator around the same time. Mostly digital consoles and less fun than the cords.
@Legend813a
@Legend813a 11 лет назад
Is that Joanne Daniels the time lady?
@NortelGeek
@NortelGeek 4 года назад
It really really sounds like her. She's got the same type of vocal quality. I think she's a little older than Joanne would have been, though.
@Legend813a
@Legend813a 11 лет назад
The woman on this film, her voice must have been used on recordings... who is she?
@millosolo
@millosolo 3 года назад
I swear I saw my mom
@paulwomack5866
@paulwomack5866 3 года назад
Probably useful to read this first; en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twistor_memory
@boulder89984
@boulder89984 6 лет назад
How did they build this without 14 year Asian kids? Times have changed.
@TriRabbi
@TriRabbi 7 месяцев назад
This is way too complicated.
@SciHeartJourney
@SciHeartJourney 3 года назад
"She doesn't need to be very intelligent". How cruel the way they treat operators. Notice they keep calling the operator a "she"?
@DanaTheInsane
@DanaTheInsane Год назад
Operators were mostly women.
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