From: JW on
On Thu, 13 May 2010 08:06:40 -0400 "Michael A. Terrell"
<mike.terrell(a)earthlink.net> wrote in Message id:
<89WdnUewNLbQdnbWnZ2dnUVZ_jSdnZ2d(a)earthlink.com>:

[piggy backing due to bozo bin restrictions]

>GreenXenon wrote:
>>
>> Hi:
>>
>> Which type of volatile RAM has the least duration of data remanence
>> when the power is offed?
>
> 1101

Core memory?
http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/core.html
Email IBM and ask if you can get a PCI express interface for this.
From: Michael A. Terrell on

JW wrote:
>
> On Thu, 13 May 2010 08:06:40 -0400 "Michael A. Terrell"
> <mike.terrell(a)earthlink.net> wrote in Message id:
> <89WdnUewNLbQdnbWnZ2dnUVZ_jSdnZ2d(a)earthlink.com>:
>
> [piggy backing due to bozo bin restrictions]
>
> >GreenXenon wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi:
> >>
> >> Which type of volatile RAM has the least duration of data remanence
> >> when the power is offed?
> >
> > 1101
>
> Core memory?
> http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/core.html
> Email IBM and ask if you can get a PCI express interface for this.


Hell, IBM (& everyone else) had problems with core on mini computers
& mainframes.

Core is a form of non volitle memory. It was replaced by floppy and
hard drives, which are being replaced by flash memory.

The 1101 was a slow, cantankerous 256 byte solid state RAM designed
in the '70s

<http://download.intel.com/technology/itj/q12001/pdf/art_1.pdf>


--
Anyone wanting to run for any political office in the US should have to
have a DD214, and a honorable discharge.