DocumentCode
1040174
Title
Mass memory in computer systems
Author
Brooks, Frederick P., Jr.
Author_Institution
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Volume
5
Issue
3
fYear
1969
fDate
9/1/1969 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
635
Lastpage
639
Abstract
Mass memory has three distinct uses in a computer system. Each places distinct requirements on the technology. This paper gives a personal estimate of the requirements for each use in the next five years. 1) A mass memory may be used as a cheaper extension of main memory. For this use, cycle time must be
s, capacity 1-8 million bytes, addressed to the word, read-write, and cost per bit must be less than 1/4 that of main memory. 2) A mass memory may be used for residence of the control program and compilers. For this use, cycle time must be
s, block transfer rate ≥ 1 million byte/s, capacity 8-32 million bytes. It may be read-only (if easily changeable) and addressed only in blocks. Cost per bit must be less than 1/10 that of main memory. 3) A mass memory may be used for storage of an on-line data base. Such a memory must have >500 million bytes capacity, a cycle time <100 ms, may be block addressed, may be read-only for some uses but not most. Cost must be <0.004 cent/bit to compete with today\´s technologies. Special memory properties, such as content-addressing, distributed logic, etc., will not redeem a memory that is not competitive on cycle time, capacity, block transfer rate, and cost.
s, capacity 1-8 million bytes, addressed to the word, read-write, and cost per bit must be less than 1/4 that of main memory. 2) A mass memory may be used for residence of the control program and compilers. For this use, cycle time must be
s, block transfer rate ≥ 1 million byte/s, capacity 8-32 million bytes. It may be read-only (if easily changeable) and addressed only in blocks. Cost per bit must be less than 1/10 that of main memory. 3) A mass memory may be used for storage of an on-line data base. Such a memory must have >500 million bytes capacity, a cycle time <100 ms, may be block addressed, may be read-only for some uses but not most. Cost must be <0.004 cent/bit to compete with today\´s technologies. Special memory properties, such as content-addressing, distributed logic, etc., will not redeem a memory that is not competitive on cycle time, capacity, block transfer rate, and cost.Keywords
Mass storage; Concrete; Costs; Helium; Information science; Logic; Program processors; Read-write memory; System performance; Throughput; Weight control;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9464
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMAG.1969.1066512
Filename
1066512
Link To Document