I don’t get it. The little plastic data slabs in Star Trek TOS were called “tapes”. Apparently the term didn’t have the staying power Roddenberry expected. I wonder how much longer we’ll keep calling our little pocket supercomputers “phones”.
We had those at my first programming job. At a later job in the 90s one of my minor duties was to swap out the tape cassette for daily backups. It held 8Gb and was about the size of a deck of playing cards. I remember talking with another guy about how amazing it was to put 8 gigabytes in your shirt pocket. Now that’s a fraction of a micro SD smaller than my fingernail.
I don’t get it. The little plastic data slabs in Star Trek TOS were called “tapes”. Apparently the term didn’t have the staying power Roddenberry expected. I wonder how much longer we’ll keep calling our little pocket supercomputers “phones”.
They still use reel-to-reel tape drives on mainframes to store data. Just like they did in 1967.
We had those at my first programming job. At a later job in the 90s one of my minor duties was to swap out the tape cassette for daily backups. It held 8Gb and was about the size of a deck of playing cards. I remember talking with another guy about how amazing it was to put 8 gigabytes in your shirt pocket. Now that’s a fraction of a micro SD smaller than my fingernail.
Every once in a while I think about downloading a LCARS theme
By TNG, which started airing in 1987, data was mostly kept in (isolinear) chips and the computer, which still feels natural.