13 thoughts on “https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Hamilton_(scientist)

  1. Geoffrey Swenson​​​​ apparently, her code was put on punch cards to be simulated, then hard wired by hand, theaded onto copper rings, and inserted into the computer.

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  2. Once the code was solid, it would be shipped off to a nearby Raytheon facility where a group of women, expert seamstresses known to the Apollo program as the “Little Old Ladies,” threaded copper wires through magnetic rings (a wire going through a core was a 1; a wire going around the core was a 0). Forget about RAM or disk drives; on Apollo, memory was literally hardwired and very nearly indestructible.

    http://www.wired.com/2015/10/margaret-hamilton-nasa-apollo/

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  3. Matt Corby That’s core memory, which is RAM. (Well, more like Flash memory, in practice.) In those days, ROM was typically a diode array with cuttable links. It’s unlikely that the code was hard-wired into the machines, though. 

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  4. Regular core is rewritable (in fact, it has to be rewritten after each read, because the read destroys the information), but the knotted stuff could not be changed at all. And had to be delivered long before the rest of the hardware was finished. (As a wee lad I edited an article of hers, and she was delightful.)

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