A brief history of backup and storage

9
A Brief History of Backup and Storage Punch Card Punch Tape Magnetic Tape Tape Drive Hard Drive Floppy Disk 1775 1951 1846 1952 1956 1971 1985 Computer- Readable CD-ROM 1972 Casset te

description

a brief history of backup and storage

Transcript of A brief history of backup and storage

Page 1: A brief history of backup and storage

A Brief History of Backup and Storage

Punch Card

Punch Tape

Magnetic Tape

Tape Drive

Hard Drive

Floppy Disk

1775 19511846 1952 1956 1971 1985

Computer-Readable CD-ROM

1972

Cassette

Page 2: A brief history of backup and storage

PUNCH CARDIn common use until mid-1970s, when replaced by magnetic tape

Used as early as 1725 in textile industry for controlling mechanized textile looms

Approximate Years in Use: 1725 - 1925

Page 3: A brief history of backup and storage

PUNCH TAPE

Approximate Years in Use: 1846 - 1990s

Originally pioneered by textile industry for use with mechanized looms

Each row on tape represented one character

Page 4: A brief history of backup and storage

MAGNETIC TAPEFirst used in 1951 to record computer data on the Eckert-Mauchly UNIVAC I

Tapes were metal and 1200 feet long (365 meters) and very heavy

Long length made it prone to tears and breaks

Approximate Years in Use: 1951- present

Page 5: A brief history of backup and storage

TAPE DRIVEIntroduced in 1952 by IBM

Used vacuum columns to buffer nickel-plated magnetic tape to prevent media from tearing

Some tapes were 1,200 feet long

Replaced equivalent of 12,500 punch cards

Capacity of 2 million digits per tape

Approximate Years in Use: 1951- present

Page 6: A brief history of backup and storage

HARD DRIVEFirst hard disk drive, IBM Model 350 Disk File, shipped in 1956 with IBM 305 RAMAC computer.

Computer itself was 30’ by 50” (9m x 15m); storage device itself—the first commercial hard disk drive– was a 1.5-meter cube.

Approximate Years in Use: 1956- present

Page 7: A brief history of backup and storage

FLOPPY DISKFirst floppy disk released by IBM in 1971. Read-only, 8″ in diameter, stored 80 kB

Intended as portable, more reliable medium vs punched cards, magnetic tape

8” disks too large for new microcomputers of 1970s, so 5¼” disk created; 3½” floppy followed

Approximate Years in Use: 1971- 1982 (8” & 5 ¼”) 1982-2009 (3 ½”)

Page 8: A brief history of backup and storage

CASSETTE

Approximate Years in Use: 1972 to late 1980s

Introduced for audio use by Philips in Europe in 1963

Introduced in 1972 as storage medium for PCs

Standard 90-minute cassette stored 700KB of data per side

Used on ZX Spectrum, TRS-80, Commodore 64, and others

Page 9: A brief history of backup and storage

COMPUTER-READABLE CD-ROM

Approximate Years in Use: 1985- present

Optical disc invented in 1958; first commercial product, Laserdisk, introduced in 1978

First audio compact disc introduced in 1982; eventually obsoleted magnetic tape

Computer-readable data-storing CD-ROMs introduced in 1985.

By late ’90s, CD-ROM disks and drives had obsoleted floppies