I did find a description of bubble memory:
A type of non-volatile memory composed of a thin layer of material that can
be easily magnetized in only one direction. When a magnetic field is
applied to circular area of this substance that is not magnetized in the
same direction, the area is reduced to a smaller circle, or bubble.
It was once widely believed that bubble memory would become one of the
leading memory technologies, but these promises have not been fulfilled.
Other non-volatile memory types, such as EEPROM, are both faster and less
expensive than bubble memory.
- John Higginbotham
-
limbo.netpath.net
Yeah, I remember bubble memory. It seems like Fujitsu actually got
to work halfway decent. Despite the cost and speed limitations,
Fluke used it in their high-end E-Disk memories for the 1720 series
instrument controllers. SLow, expensive, but for awhile it was about
all you could use for mass storage in certain hostile environments.
Jeff