Trivia

Hard

What Was The First Random-Access Memory Device?

Magnetic Core Memory
Williams-Kilburn Tubes
DRAM
SRAM

Answer: Williams-Kilburn Tubes

A distant cousin to our modern DDR RAM modules, Williams-Kilburn Tubes were the first random-access memory device. Invented in 1946 by Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn, the memory units were a microcosmic example of computers of the age. They were bulky, terribly sensitive to environmental conditions, had to be hand-tuned, and were housed inside vacuum-sealed cathode ray tube.

The tubes wrote binary data by projecting it onto the front of the tube just like a television CRT tube projects an image, only in the case of the Williams-Kilburn tubes they were creating negative and positive charges that could be read by a plate positioned over the end of the tube, not an image that would readily recognizable to an observer–some rare tubes did had a phosphor coating which allowed computer operators to see where the tube was writing for diagnostic purposes. Each tube was capable of storing 512-1024 bits of data.

The Williams-Kilburn was used in many early computers, most notably the Manchester Small-Scale Experimental Machine–the first computer with electronically stored programs.

More Trivia Questions

Trivia

Hard

Which Popular Website’s Name Is The Result Of A Misspelling?

Trivia

Hard

What Was The Best-Selling Nintendo N64 Game?

Trivia

Hard

What Size Were The Original Floppy Disks?

Trivia

Hard

What Was The First Video Game Played In Space?

Trivia

Hard

Apollo 11 Astronauts Used Their Signatures As What?

Trivia

Hard

The Earliest Evidence Of Domesticated Goats Indicates They Were Originally From Modern Day?

Trivia

Hard

Greebles Are A Critical Element Of Set Design In Which Movie Genre?

Trivia

Very Hard

The Strongest Biological Substance Found In Nature Is?

Trivia

Hard

Boulders Left Behind By Glaciers Are Known As?

Trivia

Easy

The First Netiquette Proposal Called For What To Lead To A Network Ban?