Title
Mass storage revisited
Abstract
Mass Storage as a functional need in computer systems is continually increasing in importance with the growing trend to interactive terminal-oriented systems, serving as peripheral or external on-line memory for storing a systems data base and resident programming systems. The associated capacity, plus the ever expanding magnitude of such data, far exceeds the range where "electronic" memory is economically competitive. Included in the product category defined as mass storage are drum, disk, tape, card, strip, and chip recording structures. Direct access storage is becoming a standard feature of computer systems, with much the same type of distinctiveness as the CPU and main memory have achieved.
Year
DOI
Keywords
1967
10.1145/1465611.1465644
functional need,computer system,interactive terminal-oriented system,external on-line memory,mass storage,chip recording structure,systems data base,associated capacity,direct access storage,main memory,chip
Field
DocType
Citations 
Central processing unit,Computer data storage,Computer science,Drum,Chip,Computer hardware,Computer memory,Product category,Operating system,Mass storage,Sequential access memory
Conference
4
PageRank 
References 
Authors
4.15
4
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Albert S. Hoagland144.83