On 5/24/2016 9:56 AM, Swift Griggs wrote:
On Tue, 24 May 2016, Jon Elson wrote:
The early PDP-11s had a diode matrix ROM for the boot memory.  You could
change the boot code with a wire cutter and soldering iron.
Is that similar to "wire wrap" ? I remember my grandmother talking about
having to snip wires connected to diodes. I think this was in the 50's but
it might have been the 60's, too. She mentioned something like that.
Diode boards were one form of read only storage in systems. Another was the IBM and other's capacitance system.

The diode boards could be done by populating a board with all possible diodes, then clipping them, but the cost of diodes in early days made it such that they typically soldered the pins into boards to create the ROM arrays.

This is a system which used it, the Microdata 800. This manual describes the assembler, and the assembler addressed the diode map as well as the parts map.

http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/microdata/800/69-1-0800-002_AP800_Assembly_Pgm_Jul69.pdf

thanks
Jim
-Swift



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