On Mar 29, 2018, at 12:20 PM, Murray McCullough via
cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
I?m not trying to date myself but have things truly sped up? In 1970?s
Toronto I had a classic computer, sorry can?t recall what it was, connected
to a 300 baud modem; by early 80?s had ?zoomed? to 9600 baud. Oh, my! [ A
typical file size to download was probably 1 MB. ] Speed indeed! Yet now,
here in rural Ontario, Canada, I?m at 5MB/s. Yikes! (Friends in Toronto are
at 50MB/s.) We can do the math but content, particularly multimedia, has
swollen in size.[ 1 GB is not unheard of. ] Were classic computing days
that much slower? Happy computing. Murray -:)
I remember downloading the GCC release kit over a 56k dialup line, in 2000. Took a
while.
The ARPAnet in its early days had "high speed backbone" links which were 56k
bps. Terminal links presumably 110 bps, that being the speed of ASCII teletypes. And
back in the late 1970s you could still find even slower links in some places, such as 6
bit links connecting teletype machines for newspaper "wire service" feeds.
It would be fun to do a "generalized Moore's Law" chart, showing not just
transistor count growth (Moore's subject) but also the many other scaling changes of
computing: disk capacity, recording density, disk IOPS, disk bandwidth, ditto those for
tape, CPU MIPS, memory size, memory bandwidth, network bandwidth...
All these have grown dramatically, but very clearly not in the same proportion, for some
of these the changes are smooth while others are jumps, and the rate of change sometimes
varies dramatically over the decades.
paul