
این ویدیو داخل یک کامپیوتر معتبر Block II Apollo Guidance را نشان می دهد. من خیلی خوش شانس بودم که توانستم این کامپیوتر تاریخی را باز کنم و ماژول ها را بررسی کنم.
این به وضوح یک اثر هنری پرواز نبود زیرا تقریبا هیچکدام از ماژول ها گلدان نبودند. نکته شگفت انگیز این است که این کامپیوتر احتمالاً یکی از رایانه هایی بود که برای توسعه نرم افزار برای فرود ماه استفاده می شد.
بروزرسانی 1: این AGC توسط مایك استوارد به عنوان یك مصنوعی آزمایشی مورد استفاده در LTA-8 مشخص شد (مقاله آزمایش تست شماره ماه 8).
بروزرسانی 2: مایک استوارد و تیمش موفق شده اند دوباره AGC کار کنند! کار باور نکردنی است و من به شما بچه ها بسیار افتخار می کنم!
لینک دانلود
Just came across your videos after having seen the AGC restoration project by Curiousmarc and his team 😉 Interesting to see what you discovered from these modules. Are you planning more videos on this subject? I was also soooo pleased to hear what music you played in the videos, so contrary with what you hear these days in videos, thank you!
So strange how NASA so effortlessly to this day keep and preserve moon rocks… yet the hardware used is in such disarray :/
one agc cost just over 275,000 us dollars … in todays dollars a little over 1.2m bucks …
Please do more videos about this computer parts. That's so interesting. Unbelievable that this stuff was once sold as scrap metal!
If you wanna see one runnign curiousmarc… just search for AGC restoration
!!!!!!!!!!!! You do realize that a team is rebuilding/repairing an Apollo Guidance Computer before the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11 and they are missing the rope memory modules? Keeping these for yourself would be a crime. See youtuber CuriousMarc., who you are subbed to.
Wow!!!!
Also waiting for more to come. You dumped the memory-modules? What about reversing the code? Some say they used a 4-Bit CPU? We should be able to emulate. I hope you did not erase the magnetic core memories when trying to read it 🙂 Thats a little bit tricky. But that video looked like you know pretty well what you are doing 🙂
Years ago I wrote a disassembler for code without any information about but the raw binary (which was a more recent 8-bit chip). So it is possible to do this.
Tried to sell it to air and space museum?…goldmine
any updates?
please tell me this channel is not dead T_T
I agree that it is probably a development machine. According to the AGC videos by CuriousMark, most flight hardware was indeed potted. Nice piece of equipment!
I want this case so badly 🙂
I was just gonna ask what happened, but I see there's more to come. That's excellent news. I really hope you can get things- figured out.
There's been numerous current NASA employees that have made statements over the last few years, regarding the various technologies being lost and unavailable.
Personally, I find it really weird that we now see this historic, information loaded equipment had been sold as nothing more than scrap metal. Such an astounding part of mankind's past, just tossed aside.
Just like the majority of original moon landing tapes that were apparently lost and/or recorded over.
It's absolutely incredible to me that such things could occur.
You may consider securing one or two modules somewhere no one knows about, in case there's an actual reason they wanted these destroyed so many years ago. This way they don't disappear or whatever. Who knows. I'm just thinking cautiously I guess.
Good luck! I have notifications turned on, so I don't miss a thing!
Where did you buy it from?
Absolutely wonderful to see this is not only still in existence, but that someone is working on preserving it.
This would be more a test bed than the actual computer used for development. As far as I am aware, all of the software was developed on mainframes using punch card input and band printer output before it was ever woven into core rope ROM. (See the classic photo of software engineer Margaret Hamilton standing next to that HUGE stack of output from a program not quite ready for prime time.)
Very interesting, please may we have some more!
Can't believe they threw those out! The gold alone on those terminals would be worth a fortune.
Is that the DSKY 7-segment relays clicking and clacking in the background? 🙂
I wonder if it would actually work after all those years… I would never take that chance. I can't help but wonder though
i'd be very interested to see more from this channel.
Kom, kom, kom, maak nog videos! Baie goed gedoen, dankie!
It's amazing to see that SMT components (that are mainstream today) were already being used so early.
Is the raw data from the rope memory available yet ?
I'm so glad you have this, most of the planet would recycle all that gold.
Thank you!
Technology advanced quite a bit, something with over a million times the power of that computer fits in your hand today.
Any chance of more videos on these? I have been waiting with bated breath for a year 🙂
My question is where the heck did you get this stuff??
Lucky you got your Paws on it..
They are beautiful.
According to this https://youtu.be/Xtsrcc0c8Mo?t=1443 the black ICs came from Fairchild, while later units used chips from Philco, which were gold.
0:56 Actually they were designed and programmed at MIT. And earlier in your videos about the rope-memory modules, those were manufactured at Raytheon.