On 08/30/2015 12:15 PM, Paul Koning wrote:

Perhaps CDC's ECS?  125k (funny number that) words per memory bank.
Possibly.  We used a lot of it in SSD.  4MW installations were not 
uncommon, shared among 2-4 mainframes.  As I recall, core errors were 
not treated the same way as CM--part of deadstart was "flawing" ECS and 
creating a map of flawed areas, much as one might do with a disk.
It also had priority in CM access, so if you were doing a bunch of ECS 
transfers, you could see the DSD display dim and flicker.  1LT (long 
stranger tape driver) had conniptions with data underrun errors when ECS 
transfers were going on.
I've never done that, though I have Carver Mead's textbook that
describes how it is done.  I did do a PC board layout with red and
blue tape on a light table, in 1977.
This was Silicon Valley, circa 1978 or so.  A bunch of Intel people put 
together a training course (not Intel-sponsored) for people who wanted 
to learn IC design.
PCB design was also a specialty, what with mylar film, tape, white-out 
and India ink and, of course, an X-acto knife.  The best people at this 
seemed to be from the Far East.  Done probably at 4X scale, then reduced 
for production.
--Chuck

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