@@Phenom98 A lot of it is very useful for developers. The PC platform is a bit complicated, but you should try some Android programming and see how easy it is for you to implement usage of the fingerprint scanner in your apps, just for example. You really wouldn't want to do that without modern layers, requiring you to do all the low-level stuff yourself.
With emerging IOT, I wonder if the nearly "unconstrained" number of IPv6 addresses will ever be looked at in the same way, where people in 2050 laugh at us for thinking 128 bits was enough for IP addressing.
The kind of sad thing is when you watch any of these Computer Chronicles videos, you realize so so so many of the vendors/companies you see getting interviewed are long gone
Unfortunately the above comment is right it's called technological progress and as we moved with the times most companies here didn't either come with a new form of storage. So either shut up shop or were bought and merged with others over the years, so as one comes up with a great idea they then get swallowed up then it's not long before happens to them and they get took over. Here IBM seem to be in charge of what ever happens in the PC industry, today that would be called a monopoly lol
I've been programming since 1977, and worked on my own computer hardware since 1983. It's weird to remember actually working with disk drives as old (and older) than those in this video and thinking at the time how great it was to have drives capable of such massive storage - and then thinking about how I can look at a drive with a couple terabytes today and think it too small! 😊 45 years of working with computers really gives you an interesting perspective!
@@a.c.4054 Back in time normal people cant install most Hard disk. Possible they can bring the hard to the PC, but the installation was way to difficult for unexperienced user @this time :)
i had a dual floppy setup at home, one with some source code and the other with the operating system. don't remember which the compiler and assembler was on. at work i had a hard drive, something less than 10 meg if i remember right. not at lot of difference in speed :)
@@a.c.4054 Computing is for everyone. PCs back then were much less user friendly, VERY expensive, and standards were barely in place. Since the late 90's/early 00's it's been a joy to build PCs because everything more or less got ironed out. Even then it was rough for a while until about 2011 and on. I've worked with a lot of systems, and the fun factor is here now for desktop users rather than just hardcore enthusiasts. Never imaged I would have a PC with no HDDs though!
I remember seeing my very first hard disk, some time around 1974. It looked like a washing machine, just bigger. The technician proudly explained that it could store up to 5 MB.
I remember when people were afraid of walking across the room because a computer with a hard drive was in the room. And early hard drives with big platters were indeed crash happy!
@@brentboswell1294 It took a lot of time for companies introducing computers into their work places to understanding that PVC flooring and carpets made of man made fibre were one of the main causes for computer crashes. I once demonstrated to the boss of a company how I could take out a computer by just pointing my finger at it. I also advised on keeping a few plants in the room to keep the humidity at a certain level. That helped a lot.
I was a teen in the 70's and I know I shouldn't be amazed by this ...but I just bought a 32 Gig thumb drive today at Walgreens , and looking back ...I'm amazed , and amused.
Got a 2 TB thumb drive for 10 bucks from Ali. Yes it's slow. But yes it stores 2 TB and is probably half a million times faster than the hard drives in this video 😏
Oh how fun it would be to bring a Seagate SAS-12G 800GB SSD (Data transfer rate of 1.2GB per second) back to those days. I'd probably end up in Area 51.
Touche. Heck, just take my Galaxy Note 3 back in time. Even workout towers it's beyond a super computer. If the future hardware does not get me stuck in Area 51, time travel will.
I am 31 now, my first machine was a 286. There were more advance machines at the time but hey, I got it all for $10, as a kid, I was happy. What I really miss about those days was the excitement about each advancement I got my hands on. For nostalgic purposes, I still have my Pentium 66MHz processor from back in the day. It was the transition from the 386 all the way to the Pentium II processors that really taught me a lot about processor clocking. On the 386 to Pentium boards, you had to configure everything; the voltage, the clock,the buss speed, the whole shibang, all with jumpers. Good times indeed.
TheRealWitblitz Seagate? That company which went bankrupt 2037 after their Adaptive Brain Capacity got banned by several governments? That thing was bonkers! I had it for about a year. Though I do not remember much of that year. But later people switched to external artificial brain nodes whilst Apple has its own storage system, the iTree, which is compatible with apple trees only, ironically. It may sound odd to you as it sounds odd to me to hear the term "mega bite" or something that I had to look up to some historical documents in order to learn what that is. In our time we don't count in "bits" and "bites", instead we count in cats and birds. The only thing left as a legacy of Seagate's ABC-standard. ~ A time traveler. PS: Do not trust the ostriches, they'll be up to something in 2039.
Agree, and how nice to see a comment that doesn't just repeat the well-known fact that technology advances "WOW, imagine me going back and show them a..." and such comments 🤣🤣
no problem understanding the tech jargons. For an avg person of that time it would be all gibberish. Today anyone using a pc/laptop or a smartphone would understand porbably half of whats said. Society leaning towards personal computing, for better or worse. Social media and news shaping peoples opinions, beliefs and world views. Just sheep everywhere. Critical thinking is at a short supply these days.
@@raven4k998 I got 6 TB and currently have about 500 gigs leftt free, lol. My first HDD was 130 Megabytes, that's not even enough for the graphic drivers today 🤣
I would walk in to the studio, and show them some 8K 3d 360 footage on an Oculus headset, then some 100Mpx HDR medium format images. Gentlemen, see you in the future.
You would have been burnt at the stake as a witch back then with that. I would imagine a even an old 2GB card would blow their minds let alone 1TB,start telling them how cheap they are and the burning at the stake bit might actually apply!
Wish I could live my life in a time loop, starting around the launch of the C64, to about 1995, then _goto 10_ Some of the happiest days of my life. Just erase my memory and send me back. 640k is all I need indeed.
Shouldn't be too hard. Save the following as goodoldays.bas compile and run. Will also fit on a floppy -------------------- REM the good ol' days 1984: REM sleep for 11 years Sleep 346896000 1995: REM return to good ol' days GOTO 1984 2019: REM danger ahead PRINT "Error occured, stay away from 2020." GOTO END 2020: END: --------------------
@@KnightofAges I started out with 2k, and that was shared as video memory! When your program got too big, you started losing characters on the display.
Oh yes, me i rather go from 1985 to 1998. These were glorious days of technology. so much diversity in music, video, games, recording a TV show in a VHS and having to wait for a couple of minutes to rewing the whole thing. Walking with Walkmans, people breakdancing in the streets with those huge black rectangle battery cassette radios. 8Bit as soundtrack added to an awesome videogame. Listening to Syntwave. Or starting in 1997 playing The Elder Scrolls Daggerfall until 1998. Playing GameBoy, nintendo.. First playstation. Compose Music in a computer, connecting to the old 52k dial internet with an external modem attached that does the starting noise, it was music to my ears then redo everything again, and again. I would certainly never grow tired of that. I actually pity the new generation, they take everything for granted, we had to be smart about electronics, fix as much as we could, and have legit fun with friends OUTSIDE of the house. Wish there would be a timeline anomaly and just roll back time to 1985.
I love watching old footage and video from decades past. It makes one think how weirdly familiar that time is to today, and yet somehow also quite different.
I've got a 40 meg with the cover off of it similar to that initial 60 full height shown. One of my favorite conversation pieces, as of last demo about 10 years ago, it still spooled up and found cyl 0. Computer parts from this time still told a story... things were big, made lots of wild sounds, and were slow as molasses uphill in January but they still grab my attention more than any modern versions. Solid state is boring AF at that level. Used to be able to tell a lot about what was going on just by listening to the heads move on a drive. Got to where I could tell what was being accessed just by hearing the seeks. Bah, I digress. Things may be awesome now but they were *magical* back then 🤷♂️
I remember back when CD-ROMs had storage space of 650MB, and then the first HDs with over 700MB became affordable for the general public, and we where like "Wow, imagine that, you could store AN ENTIRE CD on that hard drive!"
And when CD-Rom happened everybody was shocked by that. I still remember a picture in a gaming magainze when the Mega CD came out, it showd a huge stack of Mega Drive Cartridges behind a CD-Rom with the caption "ALL of these games fit on this single CD-Rom". It was mind-blowing :D
@@ShadowAngel-lt8nwI’d love to find the ad and picture you are talking about with the CD-rom compared to multiple mega drive carts! I looked on google briefly
I waited for CDRW.. the disks were like 10$ each.. i got my drive from Circuit City and it was by Creative (younger people might not know they made anything other than sound cards..) wanted a Plextor but an Adaptec SCSI was expensive too
my first disk was 10 MB . It was actually 40 but 30 MB was Bad Sector.I had to remove 30MB to non usable area and playing Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis working faster in it :)
I mean it's not like it didn't happen, it was just slower turn over. It's not like we went from living in caves to the industrial revolution. Technology has always advanced and eventually those things that were invented before are so commonplace that you don't think of them as being something that doesn't just exist. It's not good to think that the past was better because things were harder. If those people could have done something easier, then they would have. In fact, they did figure out how to do it easier, and that's why it's easier now.
Not only is our grandparent's technology obsolete, but so is our parent's, our own, our children's and now for me my grandchildren's . Technology is moving so fast that anything 5 years old has been superseded at least once, maybe more.
My own technology is obsolete. Can it run Crysis? Not a chance (ten year old HP 2740p laptop). It might be old but it's still more than a million times faster and has half a million times more memory than the computer I had when this was on TV.
in 1985 I was 6y old, and I remember how I got a Commodore C64 as a birthday gift back then. I didn't even know there were any other computers. C64 was my computer world back then. We didn't have internet, people lived in a vacuum. There was a library in my town but they didn't have ANY tech books.
Poor guy, he's supposed to be in the position of bill gates right now.. Bill gates stole his system and made windows, he's been in the dust since and died because of his depression from learning that he missed the opportunity of a lifetime, the best business deal in history, also the most influential.
In 1980 I purchased my first personal computer. It was a Radio Shack TRS80 Mod 1 with a cassette tape as a storage device. I later increased the 16k to 48k, an expansion system with a floppy drive and printer. By 1981 I transferred to our corporation's data center (world scale petrochemical refinery) as an operator. The computer was a Sperry Univac 1100/60 MP (multi-processor) with 4 meg of ram, 4 meg of cache and several 440 meg hard drives. We used tapes to store data. It was a $10 million computer system (and among many other things we printed off multi million dollar checks. We transferred a lot of data (from the maintenance department fro IBM 34's. I could not have guessed where we would end up.
Yes now we are advanced enough so that thugs can post on social media where to flash mob and rob hard working people because of "reparation", all thinks to super computing. Amazing times
I remember when I owned a computer for the first time in the '90's. I can also remember being overjoyed when I got my first ZIP drive... Something better than 1.3 MB (floppy) storage at a time was just plain God to me! Then I got a CD-RW drive that could store up to 650 MB per CD. All those hours I spent porting 440 floppy disks to my HD and putting it all on a single CD. I can remember being the coolest person in town. Now CDs are so obsolete and considered small volumes. Amazing how we got along with kBs and MBs and now TBs are starting to seem like chump change. How times have changed in the computer world...
@@a4e69636b Wrong, the unformated capacity of a standard 3.5 floppy is actually 2 megabytes. Hence why back in the 90's software existed (i mean they still exist today like RawWrite) that allowed you to put more than just the 1,44 megabytes on a floppy and dos/windows could still actually read it, altough going beyond a certain size had the risk that the drive would actually reset to the first sectors and overwrite those because it couldn't reach the last few sectors, so the overwrite was usually limited ot around 1.7 megabytes. I remember doing that back in the 90's just to sequeeze as many Doom Wads and Duke Nukem mods on a single floppy as possible, lol. The same was true with CD-Rs later, there were various tools that allowed to "overburn" the disc and get more capacity, altough CD Drives were really finicky with those and most of the time it would just result in read errors.
Both of the gentlemen knew a lot about technology. Stewart was/is a tv host and writer who was fascinated with technology. Gary Kildall was a computer scientist and successful in the technology business, and brought the first-hand technical knowledge. I love watching these 1980s shows on technology. It is nostalgic, but I learn a lot because they explain everything so clearly.
I say it is a crime what happened to Kildall and CP/M. Bill Gates basically stole code from CP/M for DOS. Gary didn't deserve the exit from this world he got.
I love looking back and seeing where we once were as far as tech goes. I'm sitting here at a desktop with around 14TB of storage and 64GB of RAM. This would have blown these guy's minds, Lol.
@@Overflow02 And that's exactly what I do along with having a number of Virtual Machines running with decent amount of RAM allocated to each them; the RAM isn't going to waste.
I googled him to just confirm that it was Woz's brother. Apparently in 1985 he was quoted as stating that no one would need computers at their home, he said what are they going to do with it, balance their checkbook? You can do that without a computer.
I did a power input calculation for a 1 terabyte drive made up of 1981 CDC Phoenix 80 megabyte drives (I used such drives in 1981 for some MP/M systems). The array of CDC drives would number 12,500 units with a total power consumption of 6 megawatts. The drives would cover about 112,000 square feet.
What I also found interesting, that even if you attempted to make this system, it would not work due to be way to big. The main problem here is the speed of light which. I mean I could imagine it might work but only very slowly, like extremely slowly and you would need special cards everywhere. Actually I think you would need to have install an internet between them. But using their internet back than it would take ages to save a picture just to find the exact spot where to save it.
I remember Gary very well. He was a really nice guy and terrific to work for. Also, I used to watch this show religiously. I probably watched this very episode.
My first computer was a 8Mhz 286 (it "turboed" to 16!) with a 20MB hard drive and 1MB of RAM. I kept that computer for over 10 years and by the 90s it had 4MB of RAM and a 1MB video and I even got it on the internet with a modem and a "packet driver" that recognized TCP/IP connections. Everybody laughed at me because they had 66Mhz 486s by that time. My first web browser was called "Arachne."
Fun Fact: The Turbo didn't make the CPU faster but actually halfed the clock speed (and sometimes also disabled the L1 Cache) Calling it a "Turbo button" was a cheap marketing ploy to trick customers into thinking they could "turbo charge" their PC like a car, when in reality, all it did was to put the CPU onto its normal frequency when enabled (and stadard was that the button unpressed was normal clock speed and activated was half the speed making the whole thing even more absurd)
I worked at Computerland HQ during these times as a national support tech. I still remember how in awe we were when our first 300MB Fujutsu 5.25" drive arrived. It was an early model, and it had so many jumpers on it, we called it the "hedgehog".
Really depends how much more computing power and storage we need and what new fad/tech will be invented (holographic projection etc) What makes these these old shows interesting is they are a window into some of the very first home computer systems available.
Gary loved to ask the hard pressing questions and making the guest squirm to keep from stumbling. You can tell he deeply enjoyed that to some level... :)
WOW this was cool to watch in 2023. I first started with an old DOS XT machine that had a 20MB hard card and back then I thought I could never fill that up lol.
Gary Kildall is the father of CP/M, and began microcomputers, nice to see him adjusting to a world where CP/M lost its shine. Unfortunately he passed away too early!
By the looks of it, "dad, please tell me again about that time when food grew on shelves and we moved around in big metal cages, will ya? I'm freezing here!"
Woah woah woah.. They didn't even break the single digit GHz rating? Most people didn't have more than 1TB of ram? Lemme guess. Next you're going to tell me they only got half a petabyte of storage and *ONE* 3D mouse.
It won't be kind.. These people are professional tech workers being professional.. Now we have people screaming about no safe spaces, attacking their own customers for having different belifs than them and canceling people they work with due to their skin color etc... Just a bunch of babies..
I had a lot of these things... I recall the first 10 MB hard drive I bought for CAD $ 1500 circa 1984. I took it home in a carton, wondering if anybody on the subway had any idea what marvel I was carrying. By the way, the AT based on the 286 processor was a dog, with an insane way of accessing more memory than the 8088 of the original PC and a clunky floating point 287 coprocessor. The most important PC came in 1986, the Compaq Deskpro 386, which kept the AT's improved bus but used the vastly better 386 processor and 387 co-processor. It sank IBM's more sophisticated but closed PS/2 line and established the open industry standard architecture (ISA) for PCs.
It's amazing how far we've come since the mid eighties. I have a couple of 8 terabyte Western Digital external hard drives that I picked up at the Micro Center store here in town for $150 each.
@@latt.qcd9221 oh no, that same replay applies... Back up the 8tb on floppy disks... It's much faster... I think you can do a 8tb in about 20-37 minutes.... I think this is fairly average today.., i know most domestics will be just over double due to slow hardware on their lastest systems. I can do it in just over 3 seconds.. 8.15gbs transfer array :) However.... Getting to the array from a lot of odd/old disks took 4 days. With read speeds of 4mbs for a fair amount of time... And the wonderful 20mbs.. was lightening fast, I was so glad to hit 375mbs and then the 1500mbs... Old days were slower, and that was a good thing... Especially when paid by the hour.
This brings back deep soulful memories of being in total awe at the "new world", ever since the days on my first computer the TI-99/4a and BBS's. Alone in the dark wee hours I was truly in a fascinating wonderland. I recently retired from a satisfying career in the IT industry but I still miss those early days.
Right? Same, I started with an original Apple ][ in 1978 and have upgraded accordingly ever since. All of those hours tweaking things here and there to get XModem to work properly or manage DOS memory...not to mention those pesky IRQ numbers. How blessed are we to have experienced all of the iterations of home PCs! 🙂
When I was in college, we submitted our COBOL programs on punch cards for batch processing. You'd come back later to see if it ran without problems and if the output was correct. Later our computer science department got 3 new Commodore PETs, I was amazed by that technology. My first personal computers were an Atari 400 (8 bit CPU, programs were saved to cassette and it had 8K of memory) and a Timex Sinclair. That was 39 years ago.
@realironballs "Watching these makes me incredibly sad. This business wasn't always evil." What makes me sad is that people like you seem to have been brainwashed by random things they read.
"This 40 inch Hard Drive held about 10 megabytes." Me: Looks at an unused 2 Terabyte M.2 drive sitting on the edge of his desk. "Oh look, Moore's law in action."
I have six or more m.2 drives. My first Compact flash card was maybe 32 mb.. came with my first little digital camera. Not long after, I paid over $200 for a 250 mb card, I recall. I just got a 2 tb CF Express card for my new Canon R5! It was $1000.... I have over 100 TB of storage, including a bunch that aren't used yet. i shoot a lot of pics!
In 1985 most HDD were about 10-30 Mbytes for common computer users. In 1988 the first CD ROM drives appeared and each CD ROM had 650 Mbytes with faster access times than tapes. However CPUs weren't powerful enough to do something very useful with such a massive storage capacity yet. The first HDDs for home computers were revolutionary because the operating systems and most software applications were small and could boot very very fast. That gave the chance to the software companies to create larger programs and Operating Systems without issues of long delays. Software and hardware always go hand in hand.
Funny how he says "in the old days" while he himself is already "in the old days". But in 1985, a hard disk of 60MB, well not bad. My first hard drive I got in 1991 on my Amiga 500, and it was 20MB (The A590).
My Dad had a work computer that had a 40 *and* a 60 MB drive! I spent a bunch of time messing around with it, and he used to lose his shit when I'd cause it not to boot and scramble to figure out wtf I did wrong.
You're in the "old days" too! Also, I remember when these hard drives became affordable to the public... it seemed wonderful that we would not have to reload all programs to the RAM everytime we'd want to run something. Still, I only got money for my first hard drive in 1992. But I got an OP one - 45 Megabytes of storage!
It is awesome watching this in 2023. We got our first 486 DX33 when I was at high school in about 1993. It had 2MB RAM and 212MB hard disk storage, which all my school friends were amazed at. Now self employed, my main workstation PC has 128GB RAM and 40TB SSD storage. I've got approaching 200TB total storage just in my home office LOL
I started with a TI 99 4A, 16K, color, 1983. It's own operating system, a version of BASIC, books, cartridges(educational, household, games). It hooked up to a tv. The computer was fabulous!
I doubt atm we will reach exabyte at end consumer, at least by 2050.eg hobbit hfr cinema master is about 600gb. There is also a big issue with physical limits in play. Its more likely ai will help us with much better live compression.
I do not see demand for that (as said by mil people before and get crushed by the future. ) But basically All storage is basically used for movies ... That's it. Not for software
+Eyjolfur Kari (friggindoc) why are you surprised by this? He was not incorrect in what he said at the time. Just as in 30 years from now someone would think you are just as prehistoric..
Designandrew I think we will still be alright with 64-bits in 30 years. I actually think we will be ok with 64-bits for a looooong time unless computing goes through some fundamental design changes.
+Mika Korhonen not quite, the way storage works, its not double. its an exponential scaling, so 64bit is many many MANY times more addresses than 32bit.
Imagine showing these dudes a 1tb usb stick and telling them it's a hundred thousand times the capacity of their 10 mb hard drive. They'd think you were from another planet.
@@oldboy5001 And if someone came back from 30 years in our future, they'd be holding up a one inch cube telling us that it has the entire internet stored on it. Molecular storage, you know. You just plug it into your desktop quantum computer and off you go. LOL
HE SAID: "The RAM card is really an attempt to expand that limited amount of memory we have in a 16-bit machine. I think they'll tend to go away as we go to 32-bit machines where the address space is really unconstrained." XD
Mello Jello the cards they showed worked so, that a small window of the memory was exposed at a given time, due to the very small address space of the CPU. With a wider address space, those particular mem cards did end up becoming obsolete and the 32bit RAM went on to live on the computer's motherboard or a separate RAM bus card.
@@ShamrockParticle It's just your unfamiliarity with old jargon. The memory sticks that we put in modern PCs are not analogous to the memory card that they discussed. And the CPU was understood to encompass more than just the microprocessor (which is what you call the CPU).
@@ShamrockParticle CPU meant the box that held the motherboard. Many computers at that time needed add-on external units to hold peripherals. Prime example was the IBM PC and XT. If you wanted two floppies, there was no bay to put a hard drive, so you had to buy a IBM 5161 expansion unit, which looked the same as the CPU itself, or third-party equivalent. It was that way until drives shrunk and the Plus Hardcard was developed so you could jam a hard drive into a expansion slot.
Just imagine yourself watching how an alien is landing in your backyard and shows you a thin crystal having all and far more the total compute power and storage that is in this world.
@@fernandoduarte1811 Given our society, it's their fault for letting us on the ship in the first place. They should've researched us more thoroughly. XD
@@furrywithacomputer9824 No, they'd probably learn from it and innovate current technology... and when you return back to present day, the "future" will likely be radically different.
All hardware became dirt cheap today. The first CD-Rom Drives were 500-600 bucks (and everybody wanted one when Star Wars Rebel Assault came out, a year later those single speed CD-Roms were obsolete as games like Wing Commander 3 demanded a double speed, making a lot of people fork over the same amount again). Complete PC's costed 5 times as much as they do today.
@@ShadowAngel-lt8nw If we're looking at the general era of the mid 80s then the cost differential is much more than 5 times as much as today when you factor in inflation adjustments. One can get a brand new small form factor PC for a little over $100, and no they are not crap - about the performance of a 3rd generation i5 computer. Inflation adjust that backwards to 1985 and that is $40. Obviously, no way you were getting a $40 real computer in 1985 - the entry level price for an 8 bit system that had a floppy (a necessity) was like $600 minimum. That's 15x difference right there for the lowest low end. High end the differential was significantly more (mostly because of hard drive prices back then).
Years later, a Tandy 1000 RLX, 20 meg hard drive, 3 1/2" floppy drive, DOS, Desk Mate, a printer, monitor, mouse, software(purchased separately) plus a three-year warranty, 1992, a faulty hard drive caused the system to jump between DOS(OS) and Desk Mate(GUI) for no apparent reason. The hard drive was replaced, no more problems!
@@baronvonlimbourgh1716 Perhaps you say that because the standard user doesn't have 20TB of storage (which is 1 million times better than the standard amount mentioned in this episode). I see where you're coming from, though it's a little pedantic (500GB to 1TB is fairly standard), but I agree of course 20TB is hardly standard. I would suggest only because it's clearly totally unnecessary for the majority, not because it's particularly expensive or impractical and certainly not because it's unfeasible, at least not with external drives.
@@carlhartwell7978 i was more talking about just because things are nu faster and bigger it is automaticly soooo much better. Some might think it is, others maybe do not.
Man that guy from Priam could have aced the interview so simply... What about the reliability issues? Well let's talk about that. The drive you see before you features four very important differences separating it from the original drives offered with an IBM XT. 1. A different technique for applying the magnetic media to the platter. XT drives were coated, centrifugally, with iron oxide, essentially, rust. These platters are coated in a vacuum using a technique called "sputtering" providing a far more resilient surface. 2. Head construction. Rather than using a soft ferrite core head with a wound electromagnet this drive features thin film heads where the electromagnet is etched into stronger silicon. 3. Voice coil actuator over stepper motor actuator - not only does this vastly reduce access times it also improves reliability. Disk platters expand and contract with size which can result in tracks not being where the stepper motor expects them to be in older drives but this issue is negated with the use of a voice coil and tracking signals on the disk surface itself. 4. Auto parking. When the drive loses power the heads automatically park and land on an area of the disk not containing data, negating the need to use a park utility and reducing the risk of head / disk damage in the event of a power loss. ... He mentioned none of that 😒
Back in the day.... "Can you tell us how it works?" "Why yes, well you see -- elongated explanation." "I see, and can you tell us about when xyz happens?" "Well, this part does this, that part does that, and they both do their thing." "Ok, now lets look at the ... " Today.... "How does the new apple phone differ from the last one?" "Well it's got more pixels and you now have to go to an apple store for any replacements!" "AMAZING. OMG I Can't wait to get one." I prefer back in the day.
I was born in 86 so i missed the computer chronicals train, but watching these episodes on RU-vid now really help bring me back to my beginning days of computers where computers were still expensive and fairly exotic, but more and more upcoming. I was the weird kid that ran home from school excited because windows 95 showed up in the mail and i couldn't wait to see the start button. And I would watch a hard drive defrag for hours. So yeah it's really fun going back in time with these episodes and feeling the excitement of the news and exciting growth of computers at the time.
Same for me. I saw and used a computer first time in 1995, at my mom's workplace. It was probably a DOS machine with no graphical interface. Then, maybe a year later, someone showed me MS Paint running on Windows 95, and I was ecstatic to see that you could move that thing called mouse, and the same movement was drawn in the screen of the computer. Then our first family computer arrived in 1998, and I was looking for a physical Start button in the keyboard or the case hahaha. Good times. Now I write software for living, which is very cool.
It referred specifically to permanently sealed desktop hard drives, versus washing-machine sized hard drives with removable disk packs, used in the 1960's through 1970's.
I remember hearing about hard disks in the 80s. Got an Atari ST in 1988, after having used Apple 2's for a year in school. The ST had a with 3.5inch floppy drive. 3.5inch floppies weren't physically floppy, like the 5.25inch disks I knew from the Apple 2. Brought the computer home, took out the 3.5inch disks, and thought "Hey, these must be hard disks!" 🙂
Love this video! ... I actually still use 640 KB Double Density 3.5" floppy disks today to store my music, as my E-MU SP-1200 sampler / sequencer (1987) is the center of my studio.
I love how some segments are so short overall people have to talk almost at the speed of the Micro Machines guy. Hat off to Gary Kildall for his 10 second intros!
I'm actually impressed that the design of those'85 harddisks is exactly the same as they are today. Of course a harddisk can hold more data now, but still, the design hasn't really changed. Impressive!
@@belphegor_tv wright I mean he did shit even apple couldn't do taking things way further then those drug addicts could ever dream and beating out IBM which is amazing