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Magnetic drum memory

Magnetic drum memory. Invented all the way back in 1932 (in Austria), it was widely used in the 1950s and 60s as the main working memory of computers. In the mid-1950s, magnetic drum memory had a capacity of around 10 kB. The Laserdisc.

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Magnetic drum memory

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  1. Magnetic drum memory • Invented all the way back in 1932 (in Austria), it was widely used in the 1950s and 60s as the main working memory of computers. • In the mid-1950s, magnetic drum memory had a capacity of around 10 kB.

  2. The Laserdisc • The first commercially available laserdisc system was available on the market late in 1978 . and were 11.81 inches (30 cm) in diameter. The discs could have up to 60 minutes of audio/video on each side • The basic technology behind laserdiscs was invented all the way back in 1958.

  3. The floppy disc • The diskette, or floppy disk (named so because they were flexible), was invented by IBM and in common use from the mid-1970s to the late 1990s • The first floppy disks were 8 inches, and later in came 5.25 and 3.5-inch formats.

  4. CD-ROM • 1984: Smart Media • The CD-ROM, an abbreviation for “Compact Disk Read-Only-Memory”, is an optical data storage medium using the same physical format as the audio compact discs

  5. DVD • 1995: DVD-R • Recordable discs with more than 4 GB of data • capacity are introduced and are soon affordable for every computer user.

  6. Multimedia Card • 1997- The Multimedia Card (MMC) is a flash memory memory card standard. • MMC cards are currently available in sizes up to and including 2 GB, and are used in almost every context in which memory cards are used, like cell phones, mp3 players, digital cameras, and PDAs.

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