Protip:

When designing a user interface, imagine some old woman using it, say Margaret Hamilton, and she's clicking your app's buttons and saying to you, as old people do,

"Young whippersnapper, when I was your age, I sent 24 people to the ACTUAL MOON with my software in 4K of RAM and here I am clicking your button and it takes ten seconds to load a 50 megabyte video ad and then it crashes

I'm not even ANGRY with you, I'm just disappointed."

meanwhile the Gemini Guidance Computer team laugh

"you MIT people had 4K of RAM, we had 39 whole bits AND WE WERE GRATEFUL"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemini_Guidance_Computer

Gemini Guidance Computer - Wikipedia

ah, actually they did have 4096... 36-bit words of writeable core RAM. Weird. Was the Gemini computer *bigger* than the Apollo one ????

http://www.ibiblio.org/apollo/Gemini.htp

The Gemini Spacecraft Computer

The Apollo LVDC is the third computer on the ship that never gets any love cos it just ran the engines and wasn't sexy

http://www.ibiblio.org/apollo/LVDC.html

The Launch Vehicle Digital Computer

<< and the MIT Instrumentation Labs' antibodies flooded in to destroy the invader with critiques and reports negative of the IBM report. >>

lol programmers then just like today

Ah! The LVDC had no ROM at all! Good lord. The entire program sat in RAM. Aaaaaaaaaaaa

<< A so-called "bugger word" has been stuck at the end of each bank—no comments on this terminology, please, since I didn't invent it; when I asked Don Eyles some question that involved them, he somewhat-laconically stated "we called them check sums">>

http://www.ibiblio.org/apollo/index.html

Virtual AGC Home Page

@natecull I’m going to use “bugger word” instead of checksum from now on 😁