Glass memory?

Liam Proven lproven at gmail.com
Sat Apr 2 05:27:19 CDT 2022


On Sat, 2 Apr 2022 at 00:34, Bill Gunshannon via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> And, as you say, an Arduino or a Pi that fits in my pocket is orders
> of magnitude more powerful and costs pocket money.

The comparisons of size, power, storage, cost, power usage, heat
output and so on are often made.

What is less often observed are the facts that a machine that takes
multiple trailers can be repaired with spare parts. Anything made from
ICs basically can't, except by replacing the ICs.

What if you can't make ICs any more? Or rather, what level of IC
fabrication would it be possible to construct from scratch?

And if the war were long (sticking to the military context) or the
conditions extreme (say, radical rapid global warming and a retreat to
polar regions) and so all the factories and infrastructure were lost
or had to be abandoned...

I'm thinking of the current global chip shortages, and the floods in
Thailand that screwed up supplies of hard disks a decade ago.

What could be constructed from scratch, given copious amounts of scrap
and waste for source materials?

And aside from the hardware:

Yes, modern computers have vast amounts of storage and power, but we
use them all on OSes and apps  that need millions of lines of code in
dozens of languages, and gigabytes of storage.

As a result, although they are vastly quicker, latency is arguably _worse_ now:

https://danluu.com/input-lag/

What if... we had to reconstruct entire OSes and software stacks from
scratch? Maybe because the authors were dead. Maybe because the
computers they needed didn't work any more and couldn't be repaired.
Maybe because we had to make new computers and they were smaller and
slower.

How much could be rebuilt? What could be learned from the mistakes of old?

I recently wrote these pieces, which were fun to research:

https://www.theregister.com/2022/03/29/non_c_operating_systems/

https://www.theregister.com/2022/03/31/serenityos/

There are so many UNIX-like kernels in C on Github I couldn't count
them all. In the many dozens, maybe hundreds.

This is doable. But there are fewer in C++. Fewer still in Rust or Go.
Very few in anything Wirthian or with garbage-collection.

> Of course, sometimes I still miss the old days and old ways.  :-)
> But then, isn't that why we are all here?

Well indeed!

http://collapseos.org/ is relevant to this.

But is an 8-bit the biggest we could realistically construct if all
the IC fabs were destroyed?

-- 
Liam Proven ~ Profile: https://about.me/liamproven
Email: lproven at cix.co.uk ~ gMail/gTalk/FB: lproven at gmail.com
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