Data Cell - Tape, Card or Disk?
I'm pretty sure the developers thought of the media of the IBM 2321 as tape
rather than cards, although the strips (of tape) were addressed as disk
drives (DASD) not tape. It was a mechanical marvel that IMO then (late 60s)
only IBM could have successfully built and marketed such a beast. Those
interested might want to read the oral history on this machine at
https://archive.computerhistory.org/resources/access/text/2013/05/102657934-
05-01-acc.pdf My favorite failure was when they found strips back in the
bins but up-side down and backwards - they fixed than and many other
problems too and in the end I'm told it was a rather successful product.
NCR CRAM (Card Random Access Memory) truly considered magnetic cards as the
media, see
https://www.computerhistory.org/brochures/m-p/national-cash-register-company
-ncr/
Tom
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Koning <paulkoning(a)comcast.net>
Sent: Friday, April 12, 2024 6:54 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: [cctalk] Re: IBM 360
On Apr 12, 2024, at 9:48 AM, Liam Proven via cctalk
<cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
On Fri, 12 Apr 2024 at 13:31, Paul Koning <paulkoning(a)comcast.net> wrote:
> Yes. See also
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_2321_Data_Cell . By the
standards of the time it was an unusually high capacity storage device, way
faster than a room full of tapes and much larger than the 2311 disk drive.
Fascinating. Thank you. It sounds truly awful. A device that
effectively tries to push strips of tape into receptacles?
I suppose. Or magnetic cards. There were other devices that used magnetic
cards, like the Olivetti Programma -- world's first programmable calculator.
For that matter, magnetic cards are still around, they are called credit
cards. :-)
paul