I don’t mean BETTER. That’s a different conversation. I mean cooler.

An old CRT display was literally a small scale particle accelerator, firing angry electron beams at light speed towards the viewers, bent by an electromagnet that alternates at an ultra high frequency, stopped by a rounded rectangle of glowing phosphors.

If a CRT goes bad it can actually make people sick.

That’s just. Conceptually a lot COOLER than a modern LED panel, which really is just a bajillion very tiny lightbulbs.

  • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    30
    ·
    edit-2
    26 days ago

    Older forms of computer RAM.

    Before integrated circuits, we had core memory which was a grid of wires and at each intersection was a little magnetic donut that held a single 1 or 0.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic-core_memory

    Before that they had delay line memory, where they used vibrations traveling down a long tube of mercury, and more bits meant a longer tube to store a longer wave train.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delay-line_memory

    • grue@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      25 days ago

      Even though the story involves drum memory instead, your mention of delay-lines reminds me of The Story of Mel, a Real Programmer. Y’all should read the whole thing (it’s not long), but here’s a quick excerpt:

       Mel's job was to re-write
       the blackjack program for the RPC-4000.
       (Port?  What does that mean?)
       The new computer had a one-plus-one
       addressing scheme,
       in which each machine instruction,
       in addition to the operation code
       and the address of the needed operand,
       had a second address that indicated where, on the revolving drum,
       the next instruction was located.
      
       In modern parlance,
       every single instruction was followed by a GO TO!
       Put *that* in Pascal's pipe and smoke it.
      
       Mel loved the RPC-4000
       because he could optimize his code:
       that is, locate instructions on the drum
       so that just as one finished its job,
       the next would be just arriving at the "read head"
       and available for immediate execution.
       There was a program to do that job,
       an "optimizing assembler",
       but Mel refused to use it.