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169 points rbanffy | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.4s | source
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talkingtab ◴[] No.43622725[source]
This whole thing is very cool and worth reading.

BUT. I worked at a place that used IBM 360s. We ran stuff for engineers, a lot of Fortran along with assembly code. We had so much stuff going on we could not code up and run things fast enough. The engineer/scientist got frustrated.

Then one day an engineer brought in an Apple II from home and ran the programs on that.

The earth shook. The very ground beneath us moved. Tectonic plates shifted. The world was never the same again! I think it was Visicalc.

Later there were other things. Soul Of A New Machine. The Mac.

I wonder how the compute power of a current high end smart phone compares with and IBM 360? I know the graphics chip is better.

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btilly ◴[] No.43624225[source]
I wonder how the compute power of a current high end smart phone compares with and IBM 360? I know the graphics chip is better.

A current high end smartphone has around 10 billion transistors.

From https://gunkies.org/wiki/IBM_System/360, IBM made 11-12 million SLT modules per year in the late 1960s, with less before that. Each individual SLT module contained a handful of transistors. Therefore, in transistor count alone, a single smartphone has more transistors than IBM produced through the 1960s. And this is before we consider the fact that clock speeds today are much higher than they were in the 1960s.

Your smartphone literally has enough hardware to outcompute the entire world circa 1970.

Isn't it amazing what over 50 years of Moore's Law can do?

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1. kstrauser ◴[] No.43625609[source]
My home NAS in the other room could hold about 350 million C64 floppies. I've sometimes wondered how that compares to the world's floppy disk manufacturing capacity in 1982.

I also appreciate that my Internet connection is about 33 million times faster than my first modem. It'd take me over a year to download what I can slurp in about 1 second now, even if I could afford the 7 thousand floppies it'd take to store it.

Progress, yo.

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2. ◴[] No.43627755[source]