6 comments

  • haunter 7 minutes ago
    Passed away in 2012 so he saw the modern internet age

    >Pearson LeRoy Wood, 81, passed away April 4, 2012. He was born May 12, 1930 in Detroit, MI. A graduate of Detroit Institute of Technology, Pearson served two years in the US Army. He was employed by IBM for 37 years. He was a member of Resurrection Lutheran Church and also The American Legion, Post 67, in Cary.

    >Survivors are his wife, Elaine; two daughters, Diane Post (Barry) of Cary and Susan Scofield (Fred) of Wake Forest; five grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; five sisters and two brothers.

    https://www.dignitymemorial.com/obituaries/cary-nc/pearson-w...

  • russellbeattie 0 minutes ago
    [delayed]
  • froh 2 hours ago
    (1964)

    a webcast about the many great benefits of the novel DASD (direct access storage device) over ISAM (index sequential access)

    aka disk and tape.

    16mm film

    Flipchart

    impeccable presentation

    thx for the time machine :-)

    • p_l 20 minutes ago
      ISAM in all important variants pretty much required DASDs, CKDs (Count Key Data) in fact as opposed to FBAs (Fixed Block Access - which act like normal drives people are familiar with)

      Tapes don't provide CKD interface and thus do not work with ISAM.

    • Pinus 34 minutes ago
      The slide transition at 6:16 took me by surprise. =)

      Chap needs to have his suit jacket fixed, though... that collar gap!

    • themafia 1 hour ago
      DASDs supported ISAM.

      And they're not strictly just a disk. It's more like a complex multiplexing system for an array of disks. It has interesting capabilities like "channel programs" that persist to this day which allow you to send miniature programs to the disk controller to have it seek out the precise record you're looking for in one of several access modes.

      IBM still provides almost the entirety of it's OS documentation online:

      https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/zos-basic-skills?topic=set-what-...

  • haeseong 1 hour ago
    The channel program concept described here, where I/O operations are offloaded to a dedicated controller with its own instruction sequence, was a structural ancestor of modern asynchronous I/O and DMA architectures. The System/360 also codified the byte as exactly eight bits, a decision so foundational that it became the silent assumption underlying every computing architecture that followed.
  • cocodill 2 hours ago
    Hairstyles used to be better than they are today.
  • bitwize 1 hour ago
    Great video for the month of "Mayframe"!