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History of Data Storage

1832-1952
Charles Babbage and Lady Lovelace proposed the first computer and called it the Analytical Engine. The basic design included perforated cards containing operating instructions and a "store" for memory of 1,000 numbers of up to 50 decimal digits long.

Sir Charles Wheatstone uses paper tape to store data. This technique for data storage was similar to punch cards, except that the tape was made to be fed continually through the machine.

Herman Hollerith, was looking for a faster way to conduct the U.S. census. He used cards to store data information which he fed into a machine that compiled the results mechanically. Hollerith, with his new machine, founded the Tabulating Machine Company which later became International Business Machines (IBM).

1952-1970

IBM created the first magnetic tape unit for data storage. Magnetic tape was much faster than punch cards.

IBM introduced the 305 RAMAC. The RAMAC could store five million characters (five megabytes) on fifty disks, each 24 inches in diameter. Its recording head could go directly to any location on a disk surface without reading all the information in between. This made it possible to use computers for airline reservations, automated banking, medical diagnosis and space flights.

With the introduction of the first storage unit with removable disks, the end of the punch card era was hastened. Each disk pack could hold two million characters (2 megabytes) or as much and 25,000 punched cards.

Reducing the distance between head and disk made it possible to nearly double recording density-writing information smaller and more packed together.

The floppy disk was invented, which ushered in the era of data portability and desktop computing.

1971-1980

The introduction of the 3340 Winchester drive set the industry standard for the next decade. It featured two spindles with a storage capacity of 30 million characters each.

The first two speed tape unit is used, raising streaming speeds to 160kb per second.

RAID (Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks) was first introduced. RAID employs two or more drives in combination for fault tolerance and performance. They are used frequently on servers but are not generally necessary for personal computers.

Hierarchal Storage Manager (HSM) provides system delivered migration of inactive data from the disk to a less expensive storage media.

1981-1990

Thin film head technology enabled the introduction of the first commercial disk drive capable of reading and writing three million characters per second. It offered 6000 times more storage per square inch that the original RAMAC disk drive.

The first use of data compaction occurs, thus saving computer users time and money.

The Data Facility Storage Management Subsystem (DFSMS) is the first full function, automatic environment for management of storage systems.

The first magneto resistant head enables one gigabyte per square inch recording.
Electronic buffers replaced vacuum columns in tape drives, helping to increase data rate to three megabytes per second.

1991-Present

The first one-gigabyte 3.5 inch disk drive is invented.

The first one inch high one-gigabyte disk drive which stores 354 million bits per square inch is made.

Highly parallel processing, multi-level cache, RAID 5, and redundant components allow outstanding new levels of mainframe storage.

Three billion bits per square inch of magnetic recording is achieved-a new world record



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