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General Category => Other retro => Topic started by: Gryzor on 09:05, 10 May 16

Title: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 09:05, 10 May 16


This colourful series of ten historic computers, created in close collaboration with Docubyte, documents the beginning of our computing history.


Featuring such famous machines as the IBM 1401 and Alan Turing's Pilot ACE, Guide to Computing showcases a minimalist approach to design that precedes even Apple's contemporary motifs.


What's more, the combination of Docubyte's photography and our retouching and post-production techniques has resulted in something wholly unique: the ageing historical objects as photographed by Docubyte have been 'digitally restored' and returned to their original form. As a number of these computers pre-date modern colour photography, Guide to Computing therefore showcases them in a never before seen context.

Guide to Computing - Ink (http://www.weareink.co.uk/work/view/a-guide-to-computing)




Excuse me while I wipe my drool...




Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 10:09, 10 May 16
Dribbling on my keyboard.....

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: ||C|-|E|| on 10:10, 10 May 16
Thanks for the link! They really look awesome  :D
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 10:12, 10 May 16
Quote from: Bryce on 10:09, 10 May 16
Dribbling on my keyboard.....

Bryce.


Actually I started sending it in an email just to you and then thought others here will enjoy it as well... but I was sure yours would be the first comment :D


There's a fantastic coffeetable book with such photography, I'll post it if I remember its name.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: ||C|-|E|| on 10:14, 10 May 16
Meh, Bryce was faster!  :( :'(

If you remember the name of the book it would be really great!  :D

Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 10:15, 10 May 16

Quote from: ||C|-|E|| on 10:14, 10 May 16
Meh, Bryce was faster!  :( :'(

If you remember the name of the book it would be really great!  :D




Eheheh, still :D




Ah, here it is: https://www.amazon.com/Core-Memory-Visual-Vintage-Computers-ebook/dp/B0089LQFM4?ie=UTF8&keywords=core%20memory&qid=1462871693&ref_=sr_1_1&sr=8-1Well (https://www.amazon.com/Core-Memory-Visual-Vintage-Computers-ebook/dp/B0089LQFM4?ie=UTF8&keywords=core%20memory&qid=1462871693&ref_=sr_1_1&sr=8-1Well) worth tracking it down!
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 10:23, 10 May 16
Which reminds me... I have a 4K Ferrite Core Memory board that I STILL haven't mounted in a frame (as intended to do almost a year ago!!!).

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 10:24, 10 May 16
You do? That's a crime man!


...and you don't happen to have a second one lying around, do you? :D


Post a picture if you have any :)
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bytebreaker on 10:54, 10 May 16
Beautiful pictures.
Modern computers are hidden in boxes. If it's not case modding, you have no aesthetic emphasis on the internal parts of a computer.


The old computers seem to be turned "inside out". The symmetric/aesthetic structure of the hardware components corresponds to the invisible logic and structures the computer works with.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 11:01, 10 May 16
Well, one of my favorite examples of human-machine interface is taken from the book I mentioned above; a defense installation console from somewhere in the US, it included (right there on the panel)... an ashtray. Like we do with cup holders nowadays :D
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: ivarf on 20:36, 11 May 16
I was expecting yellow Samantha Fox pictures and C64 Fuck Man in this thread....
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 20:18, 02 June 16
Quote from: Gryzor on 10:24, 10 May 16
You do? That's a crime man!


...and you don't happen to have a second one lying around, do you? :D


Post a picture if you have any :)

I promised to post a picture of this, so here it is: 4K of Ferrite Core Memory.

[attach=2]

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 21:01, 02 June 16
Here's a close-up of the ferrite rings. This particular example is a Russian model from the 60's as far as I know. In fantastic condition considering how fragile they are and its age. Now mounted in a frame in my electronics room (along with other milestones of electronics history).

[attach=2]

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: ||C|-|E|| on 21:44, 02 June 16
It is amazing that you have one of these that is still intact  :o The last one I saw was in a museum.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 21:51, 02 June 16
It's part of my own little museum :) I collect interesting bits of electronic technology. Mainly stuff from the 50's and 60's. It was an amazing time for electronics.

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: MacDeath on 23:48, 02 June 16
Delicate ? they went to the moon with those...
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 07:38, 03 June 16
This is so cool. I could stare at it for hours...


How many intersecting points are there?
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 08:25, 03 June 16
The ones that went to the moon were safely inside a frame / box, not loose in some junk box like they tend to be today. Most of the Apollo equipment would have had only ROM in the form of ferrite rope memory anyway, not RAM as this is (well technically it's actually a Flash ROM as they are non-volatile).

Not sure how many intersections. There are 16384 toroids, each has 4 wires going through it. For size reference, the PCB is 140mm x 140mm. Each toroid is 0.75mm diameter. I've rechecked the part number and this part is actually from Bulgaria, so I doubt it was ever used in a space program.

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: arnoldemu on 09:39, 03 June 16
Quote from: Bryce on 08:25, 03 June 16
The ones that went to the moon were safely inside a frame / box, not loose in some junk box like they tend to be today. Most of the Apollo equipment would have had only ROM in the form of ferrite rope memory anyway, not RAM as this is (well technically it's actually a Flash ROM as they are non-volatile).

Not sure how many intersections. There are 16384 toroids, each has 4 wires going through it. For size reference, the PCB is 140mm x 140mm. Each toroid is 0.75mm diameter. I've rechecked the part number and this part is actually from Bulgaria, so I doubt it was ever used in a space program.

Bryce.
Have you connected it to a CPC yet?
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 09:42, 03 June 16
Maybe I should make a driver board so that the MegaFlash can use it instead of the W29C040 :D You'd need 4 plates for one ROM though!

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: ||C|-|E|| on 10:32, 03 June 16
The great thing about using these would be:

a) it is unlikely they will fail, ever.
b) you can repair them by yourself!
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 10:33, 03 June 16
Trying to repair one of these would be a lot more difficult than simply swapping an IC!

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: ||C|-|E|| on 10:39, 03 June 16
Ah yes! but try to repair an IC!  :laugh:
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 10:43, 03 June 16
Try repairing a mesh of wires that are the thickness of a hair and thread 4 of these through a hole less than 0.5mm, at an angle!

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: ||C|-|E|| on 10:47, 03 June 16
Thinking about it, that would be close to neurosurgery  :laugh:
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: TFM on 16:30, 03 June 16
I'm curious if one uses such an 4 K chip and saves data on it - IF when taking a picture... one actually couse SEE that data?
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 18:41, 04 June 16
I bet fixing this would be a piece of cake for every Greek grandmother:


(http://www.kopaneli.gr/files/image/FWTOS%20ERGA/VELONAKI/BELONAKI%201.JPG)
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: robcfg on 20:14, 04 June 16
My spanish grandma used to do that kind of things too.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 09:25, 05 June 16
Quote from: TFM on 16:30, 03 June 16
I'm curious if one uses such an 4 K chip and saves data on it - IF when taking a picture... one actually couse SEE that data?

The information is stored as a magnetic charge, how would the camera see that?

The Ferrite core memories were most likely made by Greek grandmothers.

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: VincentGR on 11:31, 05 June 16
Quote from: Bryce on 09:25, 05 June 16
The information is stored as a magnetic charge, how would the camera see that?

The Ferrite core memories were most likely made by Greek grandmothers.

Bryce.

...and Spanish    ;D
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Bryce on 12:26, 05 June 16
Quote from: VincentGR on 11:31, 05 June 16
...and Spanish    ;D

Greek grandmothers were easier to capture for the Russians (less travel expenses) :D

Bryce.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 15:54, 05 June 16
Yet, Bulgarian ones were even easier and much more accommodating, probably, after the Yalta agreement :D
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: TFM on 17:43, 06 June 16
Quote from: Bryce on 09:25, 05 June 16
The information is stored as a magnetic charge, how would the camera see that?

The Ferrite core memories were most likely made by Greek grandmothers.

Bryce.


I don't know how they work. Thought they may flop or rotate somehow.
Title: Re: Lovely retro pr0n
Post by: Gryzor on 17:54, 06 June 16
That would have been a bad-ass sci-fi movie scene!
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