Flashback: Macquarie’s ‘new’ computer

This Science Week we flash back to an article from 2014 that looks at the technological innovations at the University since the 1970s.

It should come as little surprise that since 2014 technology at Macquarie has developed even further. In 2014 the iPhone 5 was in use, we are now on iPhone 13, and we are constantly connected via laptops, flexibly working at the office, at home and many places in between.

Old news is good news

Macquarie’s ‘new’ computer

Macquaries New Computer 1979_small

In 1979 Macquarie purchased a new, cutting-edge computer. At the time, the Vax-11/780 was “one of the latest, largest and fastest mini-computers”.

The primary memory was one million characters. It sounds impressive, and certainly was for the 1970s, but for those who aren’t fluent in antique computer-speak, that’s just short of 1MB. If you have an iPhone 5, you’re carrying around 1000 times that computing power in your pocket.

The storage capacity of 200 million characters would mean that a few holiday snaps from 2014 would max out the memory in no time. And all with the price tag of $250,000. When the median Sydney house price for 1979 was just over $50,000 it was certainly a sizeable investment!

But cost is relative. This was, after all, front-line technology in the late 1970s and from all accounts was highly-utilised by staff and postgrad students for a range of applications including mathematical model simulations, word-processing and even early email. Our 50 year history has shown that Macquarie prides itself on being innovative and industry leaders when it comes to having the latest and greatest technology.

Fast forward to 2014, and while devices have gotten smaller, memory requirements have increased a million-fold. Yes, we can store a library in a machine the size of a single book, but with our lives dominated by technology our thirst for digital storage is almost unquenchable. Machines the size of the old Vax-11/780 now exist by the dozen on campus. You would know them as servers. And they serve (and protect) our everyday data needs. Just one tiny slot in the newer servers can hold thousands more memory than its digital ancestor.

MQ Servers 2014_small

The Vax-11/780 was the first of Macquarie’s ‘mini-computers’ that was followed by a series of smaller, faster and cheaper VAX machines. They were eventually decommissioned sometime in the late 1980s or early 1990s to be replaced by more powerful Sun Microsystems machines that have now, too, long since departed.

While we’re not entirely sure the exact fate of this original pricey technology asset, we can be confident that it steered many students and staff alike to develop a passion for computing and technology in those early days, before it moved on to silicone heaven.

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