How did NASA Steer the Saturn V?- Smarter Every Day 223

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SmarterEveryDay

SmarterEveryDay

4 роки тому

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Behind the Scenes: • The Computer that Cont...
View Linus's video: • The ACTUAL Computer fr...
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Functional Requirements for the Launch Vechile Digital Computer
ia600300.us.archive.org/27/it...
Launch Vehicle Digital Computer
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_...
Dr. von Braun (seated) examining a Saturn computer in the Astrionics Laboratory at the Marshall Space Flight Center
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_...
U.S. Space & Rocket Center
www.rocketcenter.com/
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huntsvi...
IBM's page on the Saturn Guidance Computer
www.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhib...
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Destin

КОМЕНТАРІ: 6 700
@smartereveryday
@smartereveryday 4 роки тому
I would like to point out several things: 1. Luke Talley is awesome. 2. Every single frame of this video requires more memory storage than this memory module is capable of handling. Think about that. 3. On the second channel we talk about things like how they took into account gyroscopic precession with this bad boy. They also crashed this into the moon and used the signal as a way to figure out what the inside of the moon is like. It's a good video, you should consider watching it. ( ukposts.info/have/v-deo/bp1-f2ygipCkoqc.html ) 4. This is not the Apollo computer. This is the Saturn V computer. They're different. This steered the rocket. 5. People that support Smarter Every Day on Patreon are really cool and I like them a lot. ( www.patreon.com/smartereveryday )
@Sudz3
@Sudz3 4 роки тому
I think I commented about Point #2 on Linus's video, lol
@ThatGuy3714
@ThatGuy3714 4 роки тому
That module will sell for close to $15k or even more if someone really wants it. I saw one sell once. Cant remember the exact amount but i remember it was well over $10k
@superwillbob
@superwillbob 4 роки тому
Hey @SmarterEveryday two of the links included the parenthesis. They don't send you to the right page. Great video as always!
@lit_for_20
@lit_for_20 4 роки тому
Thank you for this video, honestly. As an IT student, this really, REALLY puts things into perspective for generations to come. Your efforts and connections to make this happen are highly appreciated.
@xlittlep
@xlittlep 4 роки тому
Destin, when do you take time to listen to Audible? While driving in short trips? Only while driving long trips? While doing chores around the house like cleaning or cooking? Just curious how I can fit more time into my life for Audible.
@rubenserrano3043
@rubenserrano3043 4 роки тому
Bunch of copper cables with rings: "Nah, I just made it to the moon." My 8 cores cpu: "Chrome stopped working*"
@RedFathom
@RedFathom 4 роки тому
time to get out the fanfold paper printout and look for the error.
@Sigrafix
@Sigrafix 4 роки тому
@Aung Zeya Programmers have gotten lazier and lazier the better the hardware has become.. Lol.
@rinalds1620
@rinalds1620 4 роки тому
@@Sigrafix what. Either you're stupid or joking. Programmers were lazier in the past because there wasn't anything to program. Now that everyone has a computer we can invent new things in out homes.
@Artyomthewalrus
@Artyomthewalrus 4 роки тому
@@rinalds1620 Why? It's actually a problem, back in the day programmers were forced to make very efficient programs, now programmers have often gotten lazy and increased power allows them to create bloated inefficient programs that still run fine. Software optimization takes alot of work, and something that you don't have to care about nearly as much as you used to. Programs in general becoming more bloated and inefficient is a thing
@Sigrafix
@Sigrafix 4 роки тому
@@rinalds1620 Clearly you know nothing on the subject and should quietly bow out of the conversation.. The other dude already explained it so I won't bother.
@scottmanley
@scottmanley 4 роки тому
Fun fact about the core memory - it's non volatile, which means the RAM on that computer still contains state from when it was turned on 50 years ago, the AGC restoration team were able to recover data from active memory.
@movax20h
@movax20h 4 роки тому
Yeah. Magnetic storage is very resilient as long the tempering of a medium is not too high. Similarly magnetic tapes and hardrives are readable decades after. Does the AGC restoration team have any video about the ROM memory that contains program instructions? Afaik it was hand made to spec and is even more intricate.
@sterlinglozalee9926
@sterlinglozalee9926 4 роки тому
Scott Manley, AYYYYY!!! Seeing Scott randomly on here! I’m about to go watch your latest video too! Vid suggestion for future - look at water mining on the moon and possible methods for getting the water back into cislunar. They’ve suggested “rail gun,” tethered slingshot w/ lunar orbital pickup, rocket from lunar surface, rocket from in PSR crater, etc. Good info start is the Commercial Lunar Propellant Architecture. Also - Nuclear rockets might make a comeback!! Have a good one, Scott!
@jpitt916
@jpitt916 4 роки тому
Those videos are awesome, the AGC restoration team undertook an incredible challenge! Also, I love your videos.
@xXLtDudeXx
@xXLtDudeXx 4 роки тому
When that collab is so dank Scott Manley just shows up in the comments.
@stevenhorii876
@stevenhorii876 4 роки тому
@@movax20h The nonvolatility of core memory with power loss was one reason it continued to be used through the Shuttle program. The early Shuttle computers used core memory in both the main computer and the input-output processor. The third "box" of the computer set was the display controller. Later Shuttles flew with a computer set that had two boxes - the main computer and IOP were able to be built into one box since the core memory was replaced by battery backed-up CMOS RAM. The backup battery pack was accessible for replacement on the "front" of the box. The Shuttle standard shipset of computers was five of the GPCs - four operational and the fifth for backup. They ran the same software and the output of the four machines was compared in a "voting" scheme to avoid the problem of any single computer error resulting in a situation that could abort the mission. Mass memory was magnetic tape and held copies of the flight software that could be reloaded into the computers if necessary.
@bobbart6498
@bobbart6498 3 роки тому
I like how they’re just walking into a museum with large suitcases and Linus is talking about very large bombs.
@dannyramirez3875
@dannyramirez3875 3 роки тому
Luckily it wasn't an airport lol
@unvein1863
@unvein1863 2 роки тому
it's actually not a museum, it's classed (zoned) as a theme park. i live in huntsville; well actually madison which is 10 minutes away from hunstville city. it had an imax movie theatre, a few rides that shoot up and down and simulate the gforce of the rocket... and a teaching sector.
@LincMinecrafter
@LincMinecrafter Рік тому
@@unvein1863 I have been there it’s so cool!
@imp4ktth
@imp4ktth 11 місяців тому
people saw the camera man, so its safe.
@DoubsGaming
@DoubsGaming 9 місяців тому
​@@unvein1863I also live in a place near the same name and was annoyed to find out it's in a completely different state. "My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined." lol
@mjcmonkey4427
@mjcmonkey4427 3 роки тому
"That's right... we steered da rocket." What an absolute legend
@vanhakaveri
@vanhakaveri 3 роки тому
I don't know many things that you could be more proud of.
@averyzaliasylvia4026
@averyzaliasylvia4026 4 роки тому
My anxiety kicks in Everytime linus hold something in the video
@adatdz5011
@adatdz5011 4 роки тому
Averyzalia Sylvia 😂
@bard1101
@bard1101 4 роки тому
Me too hahaha
@DaveRG
@DaveRG 4 роки тому
Lmao
@Igor-ls1qq
@Igor-ls1qq 4 роки тому
YES
@CottonballMonster
@CottonballMonster 3 роки тому
specially when Luke commented on how valuable it is (3:27)
@code-dredd
@code-dredd 4 роки тому
-"How valuable is that module?" **Linus grabs it** -"How valuable _was_ that module?"
@beauabbiss8654
@beauabbiss8654 4 роки тому
"Linus drop tips"
@iandunstan2760
@iandunstan2760 4 роки тому
Ask antiques road show.
@peronkop
@peronkop 4 роки тому
DAMNIT LINUS!
@CO8848_2
@CO8848_2 4 роки тому
Linus will buy an eBay replacement after he drops the computer for Saturn V
@WhereAllTheRumGone
@WhereAllTheRumGone 4 роки тому
@@beauabbiss8654 Linus Drop Bits
@chuckb5074
@chuckb5074 3 роки тому
I worked with Luke Talley at IBM-Charlotte during the mid to late 1980's. As a young engineer, I was enthralled by his stories of the space program. A few years ago, I was visiting my son in Huntsville where he works as an aerospace engineer and we decided to go to the Space and Rocket Center. While touring the Saturn-V, I told my son about Luke and related a story Luke told about firing the F-1 engines. A few minutes later, we arrived at the instrument ring and there stood Luke. I hadn't seen him in 25 years but he hadn't changed much. He was as sharp as ever.
@TomKappeln
@TomKappeln 3 роки тому
I heard he's gone may 20 ... Can you confirm that ? Greets from Germany.
@jirehla-ab1671
@jirehla-ab1671 Рік тому
Did Luke also worked on the maibframes?
@reginaldthebroom2403
@reginaldthebroom2403 Рік тому
@@TomKappeln he's not, a new video was just posted
@TomKappeln
@TomKappeln Рік тому
@@reginaldthebroom2403 WOW ! Good news ! THX and a happy new one !
@reginaldthebroom2403
@reginaldthebroom2403 Рік тому
@TomKappeln No worries bro, you too
@pacershark452
@pacershark452 3 роки тому
Luke Tally: A man who's FORGOTTEN more about computers than we'll ever know.
@KoenOnbekend
@KoenOnbekend 4 роки тому
>NASA needs 14kb to control a spacecraft >Linus needs more than 1 petabyte to run some UKposts channels
@user-og9nl5mt1b
@user-og9nl5mt1b 4 роки тому
not his fault.
@jimbobbyrnes
@jimbobbyrnes 4 роки тому
thats because his youtube channels are not sky rocketing
@hayoun3
@hayoun3 4 роки тому
The power of video.
@TheChrisey
@TheChrisey 4 роки тому
So don't run Java or Python on it
@jasonmurawski5877
@jasonmurawski5877 4 роки тому
WA Mozart it’s 1024 terabytes
@Mireaze
@Mireaze 4 роки тому
He gave Linus a priceless antique of the space race to hold!? Does he know who Linus is????
@smartereveryday
@smartereveryday 4 роки тому
Second channel.
@zachmora4680
@zachmora4680 4 роки тому
SmarterEveryDay huh?
@thelastcube.
@thelastcube. 4 роки тому
@@zachmora4680 Second Channel.
@grosseileracingteam
@grosseileracingteam 4 роки тому
Linus was Charlie Browns buddy. Don't know who the kid in this video is. I remember watching the Apollo 11 moon landing/walk when I was 5.
@unlokia
@unlokia 4 роки тому
@@grosseileracingteam Ahhhh NOW you made me have to abandon watching this, and go watch Charlie Brown (I am serious!)
@Ech0Chamber
@Ech0Chamber 3 роки тому
"You musta shot somebody to get that." I love that line. I'm using it from now on.
@Eogos
@Eogos Рік тому
followed later by "No, I'm gonna talk to one of my buddies here when you go out, see if he can hit you in the head" lmao
@AlexVannini
@AlexVannini 3 роки тому
It's difficult to say how much sorrow I feel for all those people who call the Apollo missions a fake. How large is their loss, the abandoned opportunity to understand and admire such an astounding work of incredibly talented minds and brave souls. The beauty of those achievements will be the heaviest stone on their graves, a chance lost forever.
@meusana3681
@meusana3681 3 роки тому
Your comment is like reaching an oasis in a desert of infantile comments trying to sound funny. Thank you my friend. I don't pretend to know what these conspiracy loonies are thinking, but I've read a lot about the type of mindset such demographics might have. There is one pattern that emerges probably 9/10 times: If someone is a moon landing denier then he is very likely to also be a science denier/flat earther/fundamentalist. Denying one monumental feat is sad enough, but believing that the entire world is being manipulated under the control of the big man or aliens is a sad sad existence I would never want for myself.
@Skraeling1000
@Skraeling1000 3 роки тому
@@meusana3681 and Deep Void - well said both of you!
@afoxwithahat7846
@afoxwithahat7846 2 роки тому
They all have something in common, they don't know nor want to know how the world works. Their lies is everything they have.
@barrontrump3943
@barrontrump3943 2 роки тому
@@afoxwithahat7846 we didn't have the technology to thwart the sun's radiation without the astronauts dying. Nasa "lost" the schematics and video files then "recreated the recordings in the 90s. Then pulled the archives out of thin air just recently. Very sus.
@gunit5477
@gunit5477 Рік тому
The moon landings were fake to some extend which we will never know. Whole point is why no ones gone to moon for 50 years
@rc2300s2r
@rc2300s2r 4 роки тому
Luke made me feel like I’m barely qualified to smash rocks together.
@themaconeau
@themaconeau 4 роки тому
Now now, Cave. 🤣
@jakefriesenjake
@jakefriesenjake 4 роки тому
My brain hurts, and I'm the smart one in my family....
@leps69
@leps69 4 роки тому
Felt absolutely the same
@_yuri
@_yuri 4 роки тому
@Agent J thanks rick
@gorillanobaka9772
@gorillanobaka9772 4 роки тому
Luke makes 99% of us feel like orangutans because ,compared to him, we basically are. Our educational system today sucks balls, and it is clearly intended to output straight up retards . Also our intellect is way below his but that's OK. There's a reason why he IS a top scientist and we are not. He also benefited of better education BUT, he also had the discipline and dedication to go through that education, unlike the college kids these days that need fistfuls of Adderall just to read through half of "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening", without falling asleep. Oh, i love how defensive they get when confronted about: "But I've got a prescription for this..." "Is not my fault.. I'm ADD, ADHD ,ABCD, QWERTY or any other acronyms they can remember." :)
@SaeedAlFalasi
@SaeedAlFalasi 4 роки тому
1960: We thread magnetic cores into the memory module 2020: We cry over C++ build errors
@spacemanspiff3954
@spacemanspiff3954 3 роки тому
Bruh I've got PTSD from C++... The amount of linking errors, duplicate declarations, forgetting to include the correct headers and libraries... These are the things that give me nightmares
@SaeedAlFalasi
@SaeedAlFalasi 3 роки тому
@@spacemanspiff3954 lol I feel ya, but nothing in life was as difficult as threading magnetic cores by hand
@autohmae
@autohmae 3 роки тому
@@Avaxar Rust is trying to solve some of that problem by being memory safe.
@GaetanoRomano
@GaetanoRomano 3 роки тому
Just use the stl structures man
@Lambda_Ovine
@Lambda_Ovine 3 роки тому
It's funny to see people referring to C and C++ "low level programming."
@isaacbasque8931
@isaacbasque8931 Рік тому
Linus is WAYYYY calmer in this situation than I would be, That Saturn V peeking up over the trees would be one of the coolest things I've ever seen in my life
@ro887
@ro887 Рік тому
I know. I would freak out like a little kid seeing that!
@mein3324
@mein3324 7 місяців тому
Yes cuz he have seen lot cool things or seen rockets before, so it is normal human behviour. Most coolest thing in this video is not that saturn V model but the technology used in it. That LVDC memory model is really work of a genius. And meeting guy from that time who worked on it.
@deepsleep7822
@deepsleep7822 4 місяці тому
Until you get up next to it, walk around it, the size of the rocket is just amazing.
@plrpilot
@plrpilot 3 роки тому
Just watching the panic on Luke's face when he realized you actually had a real memory module was priceless. He never really took his eyes off of it. I've spent several hours looking at these modules in sheer amazement of the patience for handcrafting this. I never knew what it took to analyze the data, so this is cool. Thanks for the video.
@IkmelAAA
@IkmelAAA 4 роки тому
"Here Linus, hold this" UKposts: *gasp*
@sechura3698
@sechura3698 3 роки тому
0:59 "Oh, thats brave." involuntarily came out of my mouth.
@HimeshKundal
@HimeshKundal 3 роки тому
Think if he drops it
@Chris-wz5zf
@Chris-wz5zf 4 роки тому
I'm so glad Linus didn't drop that module...
@Cubebass
@Cubebass 4 роки тому
NO SPOILERS PLEASE
@TechnoYacy
@TechnoYacy 4 роки тому
Oops I threw my cpu
@awesomestuff9715
@awesomestuff9715 4 роки тому
yeah i was like oh no why did they let him hold it
@mahmoodjazmawy9463
@mahmoodjazmawy9463 4 роки тому
Ffs I'm still mid video and you spoiled the whole thing for me
@martinc.720
@martinc.720 4 роки тому
And I'm so glad 1,000's of people left that exact same comment.
@starcultiniser
@starcultiniser 3 роки тому
*Linus holding the computer* everyone: nervously chuckles
@callspreadzero854
@callspreadzero854 3 роки тому
Still to this day, the people that threaded those copper wires blows me away. There’s footage somewhere of a female IBM employee doing that very task and it’s impressive to say the least. I always thought how incredible of a quilt maker she must have been.
@Quaker763
@Quaker763 9 місяців тому
You would need an extremely steady hand, even with the computer assistance they had to thread the correct hole and guide the wire in. Probably why they hired seamstresses for the job.
@FreejackVesa
@FreejackVesa 7 місяців тому
@@Quaker763they started using a manual jig and threading the memory by hand in a sense - the actual configuration had to be checked each time. As time went on they further developed the jig so it was "automatic" in the sense that the position and ring configuration were transposed automatically, this was later in the Apollo program. Everything is easier with the right jig, and I quite literally mean everything.
@Wolfcubware
@Wolfcubware 4 роки тому
YOU GAVE THE GUY WHO DROPS EVERYTHING, A PRICELESS PIECE OF HUMAN HISTORY
@pacmann.
@pacmann. 4 роки тому
It's fake !
@TheGnome-Ad
@TheGnome-Ad 4 роки тому
Facts
@TheKing-xg4uu
@TheKing-xg4uu 4 роки тому
Luke "You must have shot somebody to get that"Talley, what a Legend.
@godofcows4649
@godofcows4649 3 роки тому
I love how linus is holding something that's not only irreplaceable, but also probably worth tens of thousands
@damienhartley3222
@damienhartley3222 3 роки тому
@@MrCrabs231 There is probably somebody who can tread some more rope but I would give Linus the duplicate version.
@anonymoususer638
@anonymoususer638 3 роки тому
It's priceless.
@Javieboy
@Javieboy Рік тому
@Earth Titan millions?
@shadesofmist9214
@shadesofmist9214 Рік тому
it cant be broken by drop down ... this hardware is build for a rocket .
@joeroszak2381
@joeroszak2381 Рік тому
@@shadesofmist9214it wouldn’t break. It would dent the floor
@chrishorner1003
@chrishorner1003 2 роки тому
Oh man this brings back some memories. I went to space camp back in the 90's. We were at the space and rocket center every day learning about things. It was a wonderful experience.
@movin3148
@movin3148 Рік тому
so what do you do these days? are you in the navy or the air force? are you a pilot? I would love to be one at some point, I'm just curious if these kind of things actually help people on their career to become a fighter pilot/astronaut, and whether I'd really need that kind of influence if I were to be one
@JC-dt7jv
@JC-dt7jv 4 роки тому
As an engineer in modern times I often wonder what it was like to be an engineer before modern computers (with Excel, Matlab, Ansys, etc. etc.). Luke just gave me a glimpse and it makes me respect those who worked before us quite a bit more. By the way, his trick for screening data, looking for a known datapoint and comparing it to what it should be, we still do that today. Its just that I have about 700 colums of data on a spreadsheet/logger that represent a point in time. I get mad at when excel take longer than 10 seconds to plot it. Man, times change.
@alanmsmxyz
@alanmsmxyz 4 роки тому
I think the closest thing we could feel to him screening data is finding a missing semicolon in our code that throw a mumbo jumbo of error.
@echoedinnocence
@echoedinnocence 4 роки тому
Cut Excell some slack. 😂 It just needs some coffee.
@alberich3099
@alberich3099 4 роки тому
Same here. I mean man those thermodynamics tables with multiple graphs overlapping in diffeerent scales we used forthe disel process was tough enough, but THAT? Insane to think how people worked out star movement and predicted it just by hand.
@TheNefastor
@TheNefastor 4 роки тому
Watching this as I'm routing a 6-layer PCB on Altium. I wonder what things will look like in another 50 years.
@anavan7
@anavan7 4 роки тому
Imagine an engineer in the future having a similar statement for today’s tech.
@kailashharsha1122
@kailashharsha1122 4 роки тому
Grandson: "Grandma! I got promoted from asst. manager to manager!" Grandma: " Pfft! You call that a promotion?! I went from knitting Christmas sweaters to knitting bits for NASA."
@richtigmann1
@richtigmann1 4 роки тому
lol
@itsabuscus1619
@itsabuscus1619 4 роки тому
Im ok with grandma making me NASA spec electronics for Christmas.
@baab4229
@baab4229 4 роки тому
More like from knitting Christmas sweaters to making rocket guidance computers for NASA.
@scottmonroe6522
@scottmonroe6522 Рік тому
Fascinating to watch the utter shock of a modem computer engineer when he understands what had to be done pre-computer. A good lesson I think of the dedication it took to achieve this goal.
@rcpmac
@rcpmac 3 роки тому
Guy: "This must be really valuable" Engineer: "I don't know, you'd have to go to the Antiques Road Show"
@ricarleite
@ricarleite 2 роки тому
Rick: "Mind if I call in an expert?"
@itsbuntybro5813
@itsbuntybro5813 2 роки тому
@@ricarleite “it’s real but worth only 10 … dollars”
@D0wnshift
@D0wnshift 4 роки тому
Linus holding priceless electronic antique. Me: S W E A T I N G
@UJustGotGamed
@UJustGotGamed 4 роки тому
linus: sup *juggling real saturn v electronics* me: hi *dying inside*
@xa-xii1316
@xa-xii1316 4 роки тому
I think this is the very first video where he hasn't dropped something.
@spaceflight1019
@spaceflight1019 4 роки тому
Like the time on Big Bang when Sheldon dropped his original Apple computer down the stairs?
@dawsongamblin5246
@dawsongamblin5246 4 роки тому
same XD
@dawsongamblin5246
@dawsongamblin5246 4 роки тому
"smarter" every day .....
@kingjames4886
@kingjames4886 4 роки тому
when debugging a computer literally meant picking bugs out of a cabinet the size of a car...
@somethingsomethingname25
@somethingsomethingname25 4 роки тому
early computer development in a nutshell
@marcel151
@marcel151 3 роки тому
That‘s exactly what it is called bug.
@liriani
@liriani 3 роки тому
Oh thats where it comes from
@autohmae
@autohmae 3 роки тому
@@liriani Look up the video: 9th September 1947: Moth 'bug' discovered inside a Harvard computer And Grace Hopper too
@frogstamper
@frogstamper 3 роки тому
Wow, just wow, what an awesome video, this is the best thing I've seen on YT in a very long time, and what a joy to hear from a Saturn 5 original in Luke, add Linus to the mix and you've got a must-watch. Many thanks for posting and I'm happy to sub for more.
@DonaldCookNJ
@DonaldCookNJ 3 роки тому
This is just... beyond amazing! Thank you Destin, Linus and Luke!
@ahmedsan4065
@ahmedsan4065 4 роки тому
"you had to shoot someone to get that" Oh, so how valuable is it? "ummm" *changes subject* He was protecting them from getting shot 😂
@kaylibbmatheson6799
@kaylibbmatheson6799 4 роки тому
Ahmad Wehbe the video would of been out after they gave it back 😂
@NixonAxi
@NixonAxi 4 роки тому
This is America - Childish Gambino
@kerbotr
@kerbotr 4 роки тому
Plot twist he wants to shoot them but he lost his bullet
@goldenhate6649
@goldenhate6649 4 роки тому
Nicholas Ovel A) computer and manufacturing tech was nowhere close to today. Each rocket was pretty much handcrafted. B) Falcon Heavy is a toddler compared to the sat V. Falcon heavy would struggle to send a satellite to the moon. It could send a craft to the moon, but could not capture into orbit and return. The max orbital payload of a saturn is twice that of a falcon, basically increasing the cost by 4 to 8 times by itself. So yeah, the falcon is a childs toy.
@goldenhate6649
@goldenhate6649 4 роки тому
@Nicholas Ovel I mean, I don't personally romanticize the production or the flights. The internal electronics are the most amazing part, plus the fact surfer bro's were involved, but the fact we lost the engineers notes on the engines is one of the biggest tragedies. The engines are by far a pinnacle of rocket engineering that may be many years off yet due to the lost knowledge set and the absolute rot that was NASA during the space station age.
@swivelshivel6576
@swivelshivel6576 4 роки тому
“You must have shot somebody to get that” *guy laughs as he pushes his sidearm further into his pocket*
@sprinkhole58
@sprinkhole58 4 роки тому
He had already hired someone to hit them over the head as they leave...
@therealgamertapia8530
@therealgamertapia8530 3 роки тому
Wtf
@codingpointers
@codingpointers 3 роки тому
So weird that I just stumbled upon your channel. Just moved to Huntsville a couple months ago. Seeing the Saturn V every morning on the way to the Arsenal is the highlight of my day
@thsxi
@thsxi 3 роки тому
14kb: gets you to the moon 4GB: fails on chrome
@RubelliteFae
@RubelliteFae 4 роки тому
So, you could say that core memory was... multi-threaded?
@DhirC35
@DhirC35 4 роки тому
Please exit😂
@TranscendentBen
@TranscendentBen 4 роки тому
So many of these old terms get reused! Do you have any idea how confusing this can be for us old farts? "My computer has eight cores!" "Back in my day, computers had thousands of cores."
@tomgates316
@tomgates316 4 роки тому
@@TranscendentBen Back in former lifetime the tech college I was attending for computer operations and programming got a memory upgrade for their IBM mainframe. Was a 2 megabyte ferrite core memory panel all wired up. About the size of a 2ft x 3ft furnace filter. Two million bytes! Doubled the memory capacity at the time. Ah, the 11x17 inch fan-fold paper. :-) The printouts Luke was talking about reading were his equal to our 'core dumps' from our applications that failed. 'Core Dumps' because it was a listing of the content of the memory cores - ferrite rings. In our case was hex numbers 0 to F. But read them to find the location in memory where the code instruction failed, determine the instruction, the address of each of the variables of the parts to the instruction, find those locations, check those values, rinse and repeat. Somewhere I think I still have my TI-Programmer calculator. After doing years of octal, decimal, hexadecimal calculations/conversions on scrap paper, this calculator let you punch in the info and did the work for you.
@Fals3Agent
@Fals3Agent 4 роки тому
ayy lmao
@thugasaurusrex6004
@thugasaurusrex6004 4 роки тому
Ffs
@BlackBirdMax
@BlackBirdMax 4 роки тому
I'm just glad Linus didn't drop it! What a great video! Thanks to all involved.
@v5vendeta
@v5vendeta 4 роки тому
This video made me so anxious! Clearly Destin hasn't seen enough LTT to not be more cautious handing Linus valuable equipment.
@Racamonkey
@Racamonkey 4 роки тому
The entire time I was thinking, "sweet jesus why did he let linus hold that thing".
@thefamoussheamus
@thefamoussheamus 4 роки тому
@@Racamonkey HAHA i was thinking the exact same thing! Don't let Linus hold that you mad lad!
@unom9515
@unom9515 4 роки тому
I was looking for this comment...
@Se7nn
@Se7nn 4 роки тому
I watched the entire video wondering how far down the comment list before I found this comment thread. I was quite surprised it wasn’t the top voted TBH
@AndersHaalandverby
@AndersHaalandverby Рік тому
Destin: You are the bravest man on earth, letting Linus hold that memory module
@nestor1208
@nestor1208 3 роки тому
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="841">14:01</a> Destin: "That's luke" Linus in palpatine mode: "NOOOOO" such a neat refference
@juanortiz38
@juanortiz38 4 роки тому
The moment you start thinking "I can't believe I'm watching this level quality for free"
@Mike3DPro
@Mike3DPro 4 роки тому
Agree
@joshlewis5065
@joshlewis5065 4 роки тому
@@josephstanton-bq3tg facts
@laurenpinschannels
@laurenpinschannels 4 роки тому
it doesn't have to be free now and if you pay for it I think you become less of the product
@laurenpinschannels
@laurenpinschannels 4 роки тому
not sure though
@david887
@david887 4 роки тому
@@josephstanton-bq3tg totally fine with Google telling me what it is that I want. They probably know better anyway.
@imaginary_Kyle
@imaginary_Kyle 4 роки тому
Letting Linus Sebastian McDroppyfingers hold that thing was a ballsy move.
@minimalmo
@minimalmo 4 роки тому
I was scared the whole time, just thinking "do not drop it, do not drop it..." xD
@kilroy987
@kilroy987 7 місяців тому
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="551">9:11</a> Hey, Steve Carell! The innovation necessary to get Apollo to the moon was amazing.
@SJR_Media_Group
@SJR_Media_Group 11 місяців тому
Former Boeing... These modules were not only hand crafted, but extremely rugged. After all the modules were installed, they used silicone sealant to control vibrations. The electronics were located in a ring attached to the Lunar ship. They had to survive large vibrations when (5) F1 Rocket engines came to life at countdown = zero.
@staylame
@staylame 4 роки тому
We are truly standing on the shoulders of giants
@ClayMann
@ClayMann 4 роки тому
I think we're orbiting the giants now viewing them with a high resolution camera and using that data to create A.I giants agents that can form up into swarms of shoulders. Doesn't really roll off the tongue like your quote ha
@mtw5034
@mtw5034 4 роки тому
yughhh
@OhmVibe
@OhmVibe 4 роки тому
@@ClayMann best comment
@microwar
@microwar 4 роки тому
How the heck did you trust Linus to hold that module? You know he is kinda famous for dropping things?
@saschamoseley6
@saschamoseley6 4 роки тому
i thought the exact same thing
@unlokia
@unlokia 4 роки тому
Maybe Destin has some clever way of creating a CGI "Linus" ^_^
@Ritefita
@Ritefita 4 роки тому
nobody would. everything is fake.
@david887
@david887 4 роки тому
@@AtlasReburdened lol. Pretty sure it was meant that nobody would have trusted Linus there. Must've been fake.
@iKoper
@iKoper 4 роки тому
@ninjarawr21 -1
@matthewboland5598
@matthewboland5598 3 роки тому
Love this crossover. Two of my favorite UKposts channels doing a collab’ series. Great stuff.
@CookedLight
@CookedLight 2 роки тому
Awesome, what a privilege listening to you three guys, thanks for putting this together 🤘🏻
@crazyksp8344
@crazyksp8344 4 роки тому
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="477">7:57</a> luke.exe not responding Me: *opens task manager* luke.exe running Me: phew
@MM-vs2et
@MM-vs2et 4 роки тому
When the 14kb ram usage just shot up to 100% for just a sec
@crazyksp8344
@crazyksp8344 4 роки тому
@@MM-vs2et 😂😂
@jewebychewy7106
@jewebychewy7106 4 роки тому
🤣🤣
@hardwirecars
@hardwirecars 4 роки тому
no thats the look of ive explained this 1000000 times already does this young kid actually care is he still listening. i think linus picked up on that and thats why he spoke up.
@dr.ghillie7892
@dr.ghillie7892 4 роки тому
@@MM-vs2et g
@iworkforwendys
@iworkforwendys 4 роки тому
Yo how old this dude, if he was an adult in the 60s he's looking great for his 80s.
@shiftymiata
@shiftymiata 4 роки тому
For real, he looks and sounds incredibly healthy
@samhausmann1479
@samhausmann1479 4 роки тому
Eating children's pineal gland does help with this...
@timtim6373
@timtim6373 4 роки тому
Sam Hausmann what
@omniyambot9876
@omniyambot9876 4 роки тому
@@shiftymiata and an active fuckij brain most of us youth are surpassed
@iddicted
@iddicted 4 роки тому
@@samhausmann1479 loooollll that makes no sense
@bobvines00
@bobvines00 3 роки тому
I like hearing Luke talk about the computer system and its core memory. I'd love to meet Luke. I've got two PDP-8 family computers with core memory that I get to take care of and feed. And repair when something fails. ;) So far, as far as I know, my core memory is still good. I also found a "tin" of cores on eBay and took it to work to share the "bits" with co-workers (Engineers) who thought it was cool/amazing to see & hold individual bits. Luke's analysis of the octal dumps is familiar too. I had the "privilege" of learning to read a papertape to determine what the work computer's code should have been and single-stepping through the entire core to make corrections as needed. Not quite the same as what Luke was doing, but similar. And I'm a Mechanical Engineer, not a Computer/Electrical Engineer, so it was quite a learning experience and why I've adopted the PDP-8s. ;) Thank you very much for this video and the longer one on channel 2!
@itskittyme
@itskittyme 3 роки тому
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="564">9:24</a> lol, the guy is holding this piece with gloves, and linus just offers his hand <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="567">9:27</a> camera cut and he has gloves on :')
@christiananthonysalazar6296
@christiananthonysalazar6296 4 роки тому
I can't stop shaking when they've let Linus hold the module
@unlokia
@unlokia 4 роки тому
Hey Yaaaa! Are you _"Sha-sha-shaking like a Polaroid piccccturrrrre"_ ?
@bruceevans56
@bruceevans56 4 роки тому
My mother was one of those women who threaded magnetic cores into the memories. Her qualifications? Mom.
@Fingerblasterstudios
@Fingerblasterstudios 4 роки тому
Sounds about right. Though most people who can wield a needle well have the skill to do it. It's the patience qualification that "Mom" counts toward.
@linards45
@linards45 4 роки тому
Back then woman had that skill (knitting, sewing, weaving, binding) thought in school. Not anymore.
@Fingerblasterstudios
@Fingerblasterstudios 4 роки тому
@@linards45 I was taught that stuff at home, I don't see why people rely on school to teach vital skills when it has been clearly demonstrated that (at least modern) public schools just teach how to answer questions on a test in college. Oh and I'm a man by the way (who was taught by his loving mother to do these things because they're useful skills for *anyone* to know)
@EnhancedCognition
@EnhancedCognition 4 роки тому
@@Fingerblasterstudios Well finger blaster, if you aren't teaching your own kids the same things that your mother taught you (knitting, sewing, weaving, binding), then it is being lost.. rest assured that most people are not teaching their kids those things anymore as i am sure you're well aware of.
@harrisbinkhurram
@harrisbinkhurram 4 роки тому
Pay my heartiest regards and thanks from Pakistan. Massive respect.
@ElDuderino999
@ElDuderino999 Рік тому
Nearly the same technique of ‘woven programming’ had been done with the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) - absolutely astonishing to even come up with such a straightforward yet absolutely crazy idea!
@allancopland1768
@allancopland1768 6 місяців тому
I've actually used a computer that had core memory. It had a bootstrap ROM and mag-core memory. It was controlled from an ASR33 Teletype machine. We used that machine 24*7 for 17 years. It went to a computer museum, still working. Yes, I'm an old computer geek.
@derchesten
@derchesten 4 роки тому
"how valuable is this?" And then they proceed to handle that invaluable memory module to Linus "drop the tech" Sebastian
@tobydion3009
@tobydion3009 4 роки тому
Omg, could you imagine. I'm sure out of frame there's a multilayered foam surface on the floor to catch and cradle it anticipating Linus dropping it.
@nobocks
@nobocks 4 роки тому
Hahahahhahha
@outdateduser7036
@outdateduser7036 4 роки тому
"Pick up the phone, and call one of your friends" It's only step one and I've already met an error
@Uzumaki.9
@Uzumaki.9 4 роки тому
Is it the phone or the friend?
@bbgub5748
@bbgub5748 4 роки тому
I dont have a phone either
@yaltschuler
@yaltschuler 4 роки тому
F
@cmdraftbrn
@cmdraftbrn 4 роки тому
so now we're at 2 errors. better break out the flow chart for this.
@echoedinnocence
@echoedinnocence 4 роки тому
Wasn't an error. Put away charts. Start all over again. 😂
@buzuuu
@buzuuu 3 роки тому
Watched the full video on the second channel... came here to watch the cut down version. Two take-aways: 1. I enjoy (personally) the longer version more 2. Awesome job getting the full interview to a 15 minute video!
@VanquishedAgain
@VanquishedAgain 3 роки тому
The fact that they made it to the moon and back with this technology is probably the most impressive thing in the history of the world.
@Bella_Rei
@Bella_Rei 3 роки тому
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="135">2:15</a>: "It looks like zip-ties on chicken wire!" Linus been in bama for like 3 hours he's already talking country. lol
@amistrophy
@amistrophy 3 роки тому
Obama
@Bella_Rei
@Bella_Rei 3 роки тому
@@amistrophy wtf lol
@m.s.aviation7065
@m.s.aviation7065 3 роки тому
I live in Alabama and i think southern acceints are stupid
@Bella_Rei
@Bella_Rei 3 роки тому
@@m.s.aviation7065 I was thinking about this yesterday, actually, if you take a southern accent and say smart stuff with it, it kinda sounds funny, and then i was wondering what happens if you take a northeastern smart person accent and then make them say stupid things and i figured that's basically Ace Ventura, lol
@VaxzaLimeIsCool
@VaxzaLimeIsCool 3 роки тому
Matthew Smiley's Aviation Center yeah same I live in Alabama but don’t have the accent due to watching UKposts, I have a very generic American accent
@zanmacarol7926
@zanmacarol7926 4 роки тому
Who was brave enough to let linus hold that thing 😂
@barbaante1333
@barbaante1333 4 роки тому
Exactly my touhgt
@DiffuseSpy392
@DiffuseSpy392 4 роки тому
They did. If he was at his place it would end up on the flor
@noneedtoknow2870
@noneedtoknow2870 4 роки тому
They let him hold one that was already broken.
@bobbybologna3029
@bobbybologna3029 4 роки тому
They're standing on foam mats, they trust he'll break its fall with his sandals.
@dawsongamblin5246
@dawsongamblin5246 4 роки тому
they probably took it away when he wasn't on cam XD
@m1lk3yy
@m1lk3yy 3 роки тому
This is the kind of content I live for! It's just fascinating to see how far the world has come, and to see how the world worked back when the Saturn V was flying. It just all feels unreal. Thank you so much for making this video, I'm sad I didn't find your channel sooner. Looking forward to more from you!
@TrevorDennis100
@TrevorDennis100 Рік тому
There was a point in Luke's commentary that I suddenly realised that I had a huge grin on my face because I had been completely blown away by what he was saying. It reminded me that way back at the end of 1981 I had one of the first BBC Micro computers - mine had the serial number 00050. I chose to go big, so I had 16kb memory. What amazes me thinking back on it, is what was possible with so little memory. It ran a decent version of Space Invaders and an OK word processor. My current system has 64gb RAM and is five years old!
@bassemb
@bassemb 4 роки тому
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="355">5:55</a> I just love - love - when museums employ (or bring on as volunteers) people who were directly involved with a museum's subject matter. I recently visited the US again, this time LA and Sand Diego. I visited the La Brea Tar Pits Museum, and had the chance to speak with paleontologists and conservationists firsthand about their work. I visited the LA Science Centre, where the Endeavour space shuttle now resides, and spoke at length with an attendant about the shuttle's operation, spaceLAB, and the privatisation of space programs. Most memorably, I visited the USS Midway and had the privilege and the pleasure to listen to and speak with many, many retired pilots and operators about the various jet fighters on the carriers as well as the procedure of getting fighters up in the air and back down safely. It was incredible. having these people making themselves available, happy to come every day and speak about their experiences, was so enriching.
@user-tc5ue1si1y
@user-tc5ue1si1y 4 роки тому
Yeah 😁. Kind of like imagining Nikola Tesla explaining his inventions to you firsthand. With all his tries and failures and success. Welp, looks like who found one here 😄😄😄👍
@user-tc5ue1si1y
@user-tc5ue1si1y 4 роки тому
Such an extraordinary experience to talk with the inventor and the invention itself and was being watched millions of people world wide. What a thing to imagine!
@DustinFette
@DustinFette 4 роки тому
You guys made that old guys day! He was so happy to talk about all of this with you guys.
@fastica
@fastica 4 роки тому
That "old guy" is smarter than any of us.
@RovingTroll
@RovingTroll 4 роки тому
That Old Guy's name is Nick Talley
@jetfu400
@jetfu400 4 роки тому
That old guy is like albert einstein
@aditsood9369
@aditsood9369 4 роки тому
@@RovingTroll wasn't it Luke Talley?
@RovingTroll
@RovingTroll 4 роки тому
@@aditsood9369 something like that.
@GodlikeIridium
@GodlikeIridium 3 роки тому
"you must have shot somebody to get this" Destin: "No. But i'll get shot if i don't give it back" Linus: *drops it* Everybody: *O.O" Destin: *runs*
@caritas3015
@caritas3015 Рік тому
Thank you so much for letting us tag along on your mental adventures! Most of us nerds would never get this close to the guys that made science happen. Much appreciated and love the channel!
@ahmeddavids8634
@ahmeddavids8634 4 роки тому
"They actually let me hold it!" - Linus Sebastian
@acommenter
@acommenter 4 роки тому
RIP it
@soulreaper9228
@soulreaper9228 4 роки тому
The short moment before he dropped it
@defiant4eva
@defiant4eva 4 роки тому
"They actually let me drop it" *Linus Sebastian*
@iamski
@iamski 4 роки тому
"You must have shot somebody to get that." Don't you dare change Luke Talley.
@maxnovakovics2568
@maxnovakovics2568 4 роки тому
"Don't know what it's worth - gotta ask antiques roadshow" 😂😂
@666Tomato666
@666Tomato666 4 роки тому
@@maxnovakovics2568 they'd probably price it at $6
@robertt9342
@robertt9342 4 роки тому
Probably just get one of his buddies to hit you and take it.
@azzajohnson2123
@azzajohnson2123 4 роки тому
What a legend! He should of said, that should be in a museum not in your hands !
@codecodderson3607
@codecodderson3607 Рік тому
Well this is pretty interesting, I work on the F-18 and the flight control computer pretty much works the same way, with some improvement of course,but cross channel tracking and octal is used the same way.
@Kamikaze_4
@Kamikaze_4 3 роки тому
I find this extremely inspiring! I would love to work for NASA on modern, complex projects. Just incredible that they were able to accomplish so much with so little. But this sort of work is why we have had so much innovation since the 60's.
@ajb12023
@ajb12023 4 роки тому
Imagine how cool it must be for him to tell people what he did...
@psivewri
@psivewri 4 роки тому
What he did was nothing short of incredible.
@Midwest4x4f150
@Midwest4x4f150 4 роки тому
Imagine how exciting it is for him to actually talk to someone who completely understands what he’s saying
@nolan9101
@nolan9101 4 роки тому
He enjoys it. I’m pretty sure he’s the guy me and my friend talked to for about a half of an hour when we went to Huntsville. He talked to us about college and engineering and how you could get on a pathway to work on rockets. Cool guy.
@Kenneth_James
@Kenneth_James 4 роки тому
@@Midwest4x4f150 Linus does not understand how that old tech works. He can plug in some RAM and a hard drive...not much more.
@maxnaz47
@maxnaz47 4 роки тому
@@Midwest4x4f150 Was going to mention the same thing... Not all who hear have ears to understand...
@MrNarikatu
@MrNarikatu 4 роки тому
I love how 90% of these comments are about Linus dropping the module 😂😂😂
@bothellkenmore
@bothellkenmore 4 роки тому
Not me. Low hanging fruit in the making a joke world.
@movax20h
@movax20h 4 роки тому
Because it is real.
@Kyanzes
@Kyanzes 4 роки тому
Including yours.
@projectdelta50
@projectdelta50 4 роки тому
at least he didnt but yeah lol
@pomegranatechannel
@pomegranatechannel 4 роки тому
I don't see those comments anymore. Did they get deleted?
@mtnman1984
@mtnman1984 2 роки тому
I've come back so many times to watch this. The combination of the typical Destin style with the childlike awe of Linus realizing what the engineers did with such little computing power and space.
@Klostergeist007
@Klostergeist007 3 роки тому
Destin, that video was terrific. I am so in awe about the solutions the engineers came up with 👍🏻
@syedabdulhalim23
@syedabdulhalim23 4 роки тому
I would like to see a conversation with one of the ladies who wove those wires.
@CentralAerospace
@CentralAerospace 4 роки тому
Butter
@craigwall9536
@craigwall9536 4 роки тому
There is an MIT youtube video on how they did it.
@herotheplottmix6690
@herotheplottmix6690 4 роки тому
Octiva Spencer? Lmao
@samitechdesign7836
@samitechdesign7836 4 роки тому
@@craigwall9536 Any link to that?
@mattrich79
@mattrich79 4 роки тому
My mom worked on these for Mercury and Gemini. They were made at an IBM plant in Owego NY. She still has samples of the core and wires and a photo of herself wiring them up.
@siavoushavesta5324
@siavoushavesta5324 4 роки тому
as a 20 year old iranian, one of the few things i find joy in, is this channel, have watched every single video (without adblock) and everytime i see a new video notification my face just lights up i've learned more from destin than from school and i just wanted to express my appreciation
@august1871
@august1871 4 роки тому
@Siavoush Avesta You're awesome. I wish that the people that lead us all could just find a peace and all work together. Wishing you all the best from the other side of the world.
@kyledailey
@kyledailey 4 роки тому
Iran is full of very smart people, just like the USA, but most of the people making the rules for us, are not so smart and caring. I've worked with many people from Iran, in electronics. Enjoyed every minute with them. Hope religious beliefs don't make us lose love for each other. Good Day 😁👍
@RyanLynch1
@RyanLynch1 4 роки тому
Siavoush Avesta 😄
@piyushjadhav7834
@piyushjadhav7834 2 роки тому
oh my god....! this is the absolutely crazy....! i got goosebumps while watching this video.... hey, Destin I recently found your channel and I just watching and watching the videos and at this point I'm an absolutely fan of yours..... love this channel.....
@UHK-Reaper
@UHK-Reaper 3 роки тому
In the 70's or 80's my grandfather was doing work in an IBM facility in Wappingers Falls NY and he said whats coming out today has already been done back then. An example is a story he said they were remote control/monitor ICBM launch from that facility out of state without HICS cables or anything.
@brayancarreon8168
@brayancarreon8168 4 роки тому
Minute <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="207">3:27</a> funniest comment ever “you would have to go to the antique road show”😂😂😂😂
@araknidude
@araknidude 4 роки тому
You’re seven seconds off from “Oh, that’s the memory module? ...You must’ve shot somebody to get that.”
@rageundersilk
@rageundersilk 4 роки тому
I mean, he does fit into the age range of their target demographic...
@robertlee5456
@robertlee5456 9 місяців тому
There's probably a video to be made (and a story to be told) about how they derived the vibration specs for a Saturn 1 launch, and then did vibration tests on key components like the guidance computer to weed out defects in manufacturing -- such as those wire kinks or folds that Luke referred to, which would cause failures.
@15DudeAwesome
@15DudeAwesome 3 роки тому
Luke to Linus: "Now listen here noob..."
@kenhaley4
@kenhaley4 4 роки тому
At <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="120">2:00</a>, you are describing "core" memory, which was the type of memory used in most computers up to around 1975-1980, when semiconductor memory first entered the scene. I worked on an IBM 1620, a 1401 and others, including a minicomputer made by a company called Microdata, which all used core memory. (I'm 72.) I still have three 8K memory boards from that Microdata computer. (Failure of this type of memory was common, so I decided to save boards when they were replaced.) I remember they were priced at $3,500 each back then, or around 5 cents/bit. At that rate, 16GB of RAM (128 billion bits), now commonplace in PC's, would cost 6.4 billion dollars (without accounting for inflation)! That's over double the entire Apollo program budget. (Good thing they didn't need 16GB.) Just as shown in this video, I can see the little cores arranged on the grid of wires. I was amazed back then, and I still find it impressive today. Here's an interesting fact about core memory: In order to read a bit, the computer would actually write a zero at that location. A sense wire running through all the bits on that plane would detect a pulse if that location originally contained a 1 because reversing the magnetic direction would induce that electric pulse. A second cycle was then required to restore the bit back to a 1 (or leave it as 0 if no pulse was detected). This was known as "destructive" read, requiring two machine cycles. One cycle on the Microdata was one microsecond (1 MHz). A modern CPU running at 4GHz is 4,000 times faster. But one cool thing: if the computer lost power, core memory was preserved! It wasn't 100% reliable, but often, when the computer was powered back on after a power failure, it could continue running where it left off! Anyway, I am wondering what to do with these memory boards. Right now, they're just gathering dust in my closet. Any ideas?
@w6wdh
@w6wdh 4 роки тому
My first minicomputer in 1972 was a surplus Redcor RC-70 with 16K x 16 bits of core memory. If you turned off its power, it stored its registers in the core memory before shutting down. When the power came back on, it would restore the registers and continue running. I met a woman who was a memory technician for Redcor; under a microscope, she could cut out a defective core and splice the wires through a replacement core. A recent UKposts video shows an Apollo command module DSKY and computer; the people restoring it realized that the core memory contents have preserved the computer’s state for the 40 years it sat on a shelf. One note about core memory: There are 3 wires through each core, two address lines and one sense line. The cores exhibit hysteresis. They won’t switch until the magnetic field reaches a critical strength. To write data to a core, both address lines have to be carrying current. Cores with only one address line carrying current won’t switch. The cores themselves are doing some of the address decoding, saving a whole bunch of peripheral circuitry.
@svogunlaiskis
@svogunlaiskis 4 роки тому
K
@cgpirre
@cgpirre 4 роки тому
@Ken Haley frame them and sell a few!
@terryrogers6232
@terryrogers6232 4 роки тому
Could power up where it left off...we may duplicate that feat with Ferroelectric or FRAM memory. As a student, I fought to get 16k of core memory like that shown (a bit larger physically for IBM 1440) so that the school could also get a Fortran compiler else we would be the last class to graduate with no engineering computer training. I learned just how the memory worked and acquired some of the IBM produced germanium transistor core drivers for experimentation (IBM made their own semiconductors in Fishkill, NY near where I lived). Those devices were some of the fastest "high power" (a watt or two) available. I used to drive past Ferroxcube that made the cores on the way to school in Albany. Today I am ...was...retired from physics and EE but back at it as EE and embedded SW engineer. The Ferroxcube terminology and some of the ferrites and large 'power cores' (for power supplies) live on if owned by TDK and who knows who now. We generate plasma using the 'Ferroxcube' (power, not data) cores and some of the plasma is used in processes to make memory devices that replaced the original 'core memory.' When I heard the IBM Fellow who did Fortran talk one time, he said he thought if Fortran was that easy and came that quick after assembly code, then surely in a year they could ask a computer in spoken English what stock was the best investment (or something to that effect. AI). We had no idea just how much memory and speed would be required for AI.
@AsianVoodoo
@AsianVoodoo 4 роки тому
I'm an EE student taking digital logic design and it would be awesome to procure one of those boards for the school to display! Let me know if I can PM you!!
@yanreis12
@yanreis12 3 роки тому
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="564">9:24</a> dude is holding the tech with gloves and Linus is like: gimme! then the editor cuts out and linus is with gloves now XD
@whyme2046
@whyme2046 3 роки тому
Yep
@wolverine9632
@wolverine9632 3 роки тому
lol I saw that too
@GeorgiaElectrician
@GeorgiaElectrician 3 роки тому
The holiday season is upon us all... Which Christmas movie will you be watching in December? 🎄❄️
@neeharika422
@neeharika422 3 роки тому
@@GeorgiaElectrician Grinch
@AB1Vampire
@AB1Vampire Рік тому
the wonders of silica. The close-up pic of the wire matrix for logging with ones and zeros with torroid on each wire-cross to make a memory core was wonderful picture.
@r50r
@r50r 2 роки тому
They say the old people don’t know a lot about technology but this man is probably one of the smartest technical person ever
@GH-oi2jf
@GH-oi2jf 2 роки тому
Who says that? We know the technology of our era. Since I’m retired, though, I don’t need to know much about the newest technology. There is more to life than technology.
@Shinkajo
@Shinkajo 4 місяці тому
Well yeah, he was a NASA engineer...
@yoloswaggins2161
@yoloswaggins2161 4 роки тому
10 billion worth of those little boxes (14KB) is what linus installed for destin in storage (160TB)
@WyvernApalis
@WyvernApalis 4 роки тому
I'm glad they made things smaller. Or that storage system would be the size of a city
@yoloswaggins2161
@yoloswaggins2161 4 роки тому
@truthseeker That's a great point this is in no way an apples to apples comparison beyond just the size. Depending on the use maybe a modern RAM stick or SSD would be a more fair comparison but nothing is going to compare evenly.
@dzgw
@dzgw 4 роки тому
Linus: *Holds something valuable* Everyone watching: *sweats profusely*
@Impetuss
@Impetuss 4 роки тому
Occasionally he was just balancing it in his hand while gesturing with other hand, that made me nervous
@allister5643
@allister5643 3 роки тому
All my favorite youtubers know each other and it makes me happy. I need a Joe, Destin, Brady, Linus collaboration. It’s like when Adam Neely and Nahre Sol work together, or just say things in the same space.
@aghileslounis
@aghileslounis Рік тому
Just discovered the channel and this video (thanks youtube for this recommendation) and i think it's the best video i have ever seen in my life, I'm a big fan of computers, i'm a software engineer for about 4 years now, and i'm amazed by how much people were smart to build these computers with so little, I loved every bit of explanation the scientist gave us, so interesting to understand ! ahhhhhh i love science and indeed i got smarter watching this video haha, thanks !
@Tyranicall
@Tyranicall 4 роки тому
If we did a modern equivalent of this amount of work, we could get to Pluto
@Valks-22
@Valks-22 4 роки тому
I mean... you can 🤷‍♂️ It would just take billions of dollars, likely more than 10 years one way - 20 return most likely cutting the astronait lifespan in half by the time they return. Also you can't land or do much / or anything / with it besides take pictures and send probes which is already being done.
@tech4976
@tech4976 4 роки тому
DUDE! SERIOUSLY!!!! Have we ever been as industrious and creative as this generation?!?
@JimGiant
@JimGiant 4 роки тому
Get a person to Pluto and back? No we really couldn't. Computing isn't a problem, it's generating enough speed and carrying enough supplies that you can get the person home before they starve, suffocate, freeze or die of radiation poisoning. You can make engines more efficient, you can reduce drag and the weight of components slightly but rocket fuel only has a limited amount of energy. Manned missions beyond Mars are either going to need new ways of powering spacecrafts or rockets weighing 1000s of times more.
@gacekky1
@gacekky1 4 роки тому
The biggest thing is...why would you want to? Pluto is just an ice ball that's even smaller than the moon. There's not much going on there. I rather go to the clouds of Venus!
@Audio_Simon
@Audio_Simon 4 роки тому
I'd rather go to Ur... sorry :(
@doodskie999
@doodskie999 4 роки тому
Next LTT video, overclocking and water cooling a processor from the 60's
@bombapples1
@bombapples1 4 роки тому
That would make a really cool video
@moistschmeckles400
@moistschmeckles400 4 роки тому
and giving it that blinky rgb
@panda4247
@panda4247 4 роки тому
@@bombapples1 really cool and really overclocked
@saintmayhem9873
@saintmayhem9873 4 роки тому
Excuse me *pushes up glasses and snorts* Its a memory module.
@christrahan2229
@christrahan2229 3 роки тому
You did it again man... Destin.. again you put a smile on my face for a second night in a row. Thank you for being you :)
@hokep61
@hokep61 Рік тому
To shed a bit of light on the "women assemblers" point....In the late 60's, myself and my future wife, worked for a NASA subcontractor. One of my jobs was to set up and the final testing of telementry oscillators for the Apollo spacecraft. The transistors for the unit were literally the size of pin heads and the three leads were the size of hair strands. The amazing thing is the units were all hand soldered by women. I specify women because the company only allowed women to work on these lines. These women would install these same components on multiple units, hour after hour....day after day. All while carrying on multiple conversations and keeping a running log of each individual component....with virtually no mistakes. Men would go nuts in the first few hours! The only special training that was reqired was to pass the exam and obtain a NASA soldering license. In short....these ladies and their counterparts, did an amazing job and without their skill and talent, most of this would have never happened. They are truly some of the unsung heroes of the space program. Oh....did I mention, my wife of over 50 years was one of those ladies!
@jihadsadi1575
@jihadsadi1575 4 роки тому
Imagine going to this guy and saying "moon landing was a lie"
@FMHikari
@FMHikari 4 роки тому
If the memory module wasn't priceless he'd probably want to slap the person with it.
@vivekanandan5093
@vivekanandan5093 4 роки тому
@@FMHikari I was thinking same
@its_Yoshikage_kira
@its_Yoshikage_kira 4 роки тому
it's fake
@chemsilestrat280
@chemsilestrat280 4 роки тому
@@its_Yoshikage_kira I've never seen you in my life , I have no evidence of your existence other than your comment , so therefore you're fake . Get out , fake person.
@its_Yoshikage_kira
@its_Yoshikage_kira 4 роки тому
Chemsi Lestrat dm me on instagram then i'll send you some evidence 😏 @1q5n
@FREE_WILL_DEFENDER
@FREE_WILL_DEFENDER 4 роки тому
Pulls out the module "You must of shot someone to get that" Didnt expect that reaction lol
@gideonkloosterman
@gideonkloosterman 4 роки тому
This guy is extremely sharp and witty, lmao
@reconnaissance7372
@reconnaissance7372 Рік тому
This is one of my favorite videos btw. Seeing Linus with ancient tech to the cutting edge is so cool.
@NoobMaster-we6ll
@NoobMaster-we6ll 7 місяців тому
Huge props to that women who wove thousands of rings on that memory module
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