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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 :-)
On Youtube there is no mention about the date.
OS/360 was announced in 1964 but it was first delivered more than a year later.
I doubt that such presentations were done about a product that no customers could use and which might still be changed until the first deliverable version.
So I believe that it is unlikely that this presentation was done earlier than 1965 and it is likely that it was not done before 1966. The first OS/360 versions were delivered in November/December 1965.
Tapes don't provide CKD interface and thus do not work with 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-...
Chap needs to have his suit jacket fixed, though... that collar gap!
Intel 8008 did not have anything original in its architecture, it was just a monolithic PMOS re-implementation of the embedded computer designed for the serial terminal Datapoint 2200, which was designed with TTL integrated circuits. All the decisions about sizes, e.g. 8-bit data and 14-bit addresses, had been done by Datapoint in 1970, not by Intel. Datapoint had chosen 8-bit bytes in order to support the recently standardized ASCII 7-bit character set.
At the time when the first microprocessors were designed, during the first half of the seventies, the most important architectural influence on any new computer designs were the DEC PDP-11 minicomputers.
DEC PDP-11 used 8-bit bytes, which was a significant change from the previous DEC computers, most of which used word sizes that were a multiple of 6, like 12-bit, 18-bit or 36-bit.
DEC PDP-11 had transitioned to 8-bit bytes mainly due to the influence of IBM System/360. The standardization of the 7-bit ASCII code for characters, which could no longer fit inside 6-bit bytes, has contributed to this decision, but the standardization of ASCII was itself possible only because many computer vendors had already transitioned or decided to transition to 8-bit bytes, so they could store ASCII characters in bytes.
I've worked most of my career in developer relations at various Big Tech (advocate, evangelist, pre-sales, etc.) which in large part entails giving presentations explaining how a company's technology works to others. It makes me wonder if the couple official company videos I've made will be viewed in 70 years by that generation's techies.
>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...