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bubble memory
noun
- a storage medium employing tiny, movable, bubble-shaped magnetized areas within a magnetic material to represent data bits.
bubble memory
noun
- computing a method of storing high volumes of data by the use of minute pockets of magnetism (bubbles) in a semiconducting material: the bubbles may be caused to migrate past a read head or to a buffer area for storage
Word History and Origins
Origin of bubble memory1
Example Sentences
Our “portable” computers weighed about the same as an electric typewriter, had a tiny cathode-ray tube screen that showed a paragraph or two at most and stored stories on magnetic bubble memory, which in the 1980s was supposed to replace hard drives.
When we gave up on bubble memory computers and moved to the first laptops, I sent a note to New York asking what to do with these dinosaurs.
Most of these innovations are taken for granted today, but they were new at the time: for example, the flat electroluminescent graphic display, the low-profile keyboard, bubble memory and the enclosure in die-cast magnesium.
And instead of a floppy-disk drive, it used 384KB of bubble memory for storage.
Inside they found equipment for the manufacture of so-called bubble memory chips, a U.S.-made state-of-the-art semiconductor ideally suited for storing guidance information in missiles.
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