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---
title: Magnetic_drum_memory
tags: [computer-history, memory]
created: Tuesday, September 24, 2024
---
# Magnetic drum memory
Along with the [Williams_Tube](Williams_Tube_memory.md), another early approach
to RAM used in 1950s-1960s era of computing.
![Magnetic drum](../img/magnetic-drum-memory.jpg)
A magnetic drum was a metal cylinder coated with a magnetic material. Data was
stored by magnetising small regions on the drum's surface. The drum would rotate
at high speeds and read/write heads were positioned along the length of the drum
to access data.
Seen as a improvement on Williams Tubes and
[delay line memory](Delay_line_memory.md) but superseded by magnetic core memory
later. It's concept lived on in harddisk drives which became the dominant form
of secondary storage.
It had a larger capacity than the technologies that preceded it and it was also
non-volatile - the data would remain intact when the power was turned off.
It was used in the [IBM 650](The_History_of_Computing_Swade.md) (1953) and
Ferranti Mark I (1951)

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IBM's first electronic computer. It directly competed with the UNIVAC for
government contracts. It followed the prevailing approach of vaccuum tubes for
logic and had a variety of storage methods: Williams tubes, magnetic tape, and
magentic drums.
logic and had a variety of storage methods: Williams tubes,
[magnetic tape](Magnetic_tape.md) , and magentic drums.
701s were used at Los Alamos and avionics companies. Some were also used to
manage payroll in business contexts.
### IBM 702 ("Tape Processing Machine")
### IBM 702 ("Tape Processing Machine") (1953)
![Advertisement for the IBM 702](../img/ibm-add.jpeg)
Focused primarily on business applications. Used magnetic tape for...
Focused primarily on business applications and targetted at businesses rather
than government contracts. Less powerful than the 701.
### IBM 650
Low-cost general purpose machine using magnetic drum memory. It was
mass-produced unlike the others which were built for specific customers. It
proved the breakout star in IBMs initial line up and sometimes called "IBM's
Model T".
![IBM 650](../img/ibm-650.jpg)
Low-cost general purpose machine using magnetic drum memory. Marketed as slower
but more affordable than the 700 range. It was mass-produced unlike the others
which were built for specific customers. It was in fact the first mass-produced
computer in the world. It proved the breakout star in IBMs initial line up and
sometimes called "IBM's Model T".
![IBM_650 console panel](../img/ibm-650-console-panel.jpg)
IBM offerred 650s to univesities at a 60% discount on the condition that the
universities would establish courses in computing. This was shrewd as it meant
that a whole generation of engineers and computer scientists learned on 650s and
would prefer them in their research. It also created a pool of skilled users
that would go on to work at IBM.
Donald Knuth dedicated _The Art of Computer Programming_ to the 650.
It used magnetic drum memory along with vacuum-tubes.

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---
title: Williams_Tube_RAM
title: Williams_Tube_memory
tags: [computer-history, memory]
created: Tuesday, September 17, 2024
---
# Williams Tube RAM
# Williams Tube memory
- One of the early attempts to create RAM in computers based on the EDVAC
stored-program architecture.