AT&T Bell Labs 1 ESS (Electornic Switching System) Manufacturing Processes (1965)

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SilvaD702

SilvaD702

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 22
@turboslag
@turboslag Жыл бұрын
And all of this, the incredibly complex electro mechanical machines, fantastically laborious manual processes, highly skilled labour, time consuming steps, all now obsolete and gone forever, except for this wonderful visible record. It just touched on ic's near the end, I wonder if anyone from that time, looks like the 60's, could have imagined how electronics would develop in the very near future. And the rate of progress has increased exponentially so can anyone now imagine the world in say 2085?! AI is now the big kicker, will it end the world or advance it beyond human imagination?!
@PhilAndersonOutside
@PhilAndersonOutside 5 жыл бұрын
My dad worked 30 years for Western Electric. My life and career would not have been the same if he hadn't shared with me, and taught, me many of the things he learned and knew. Miss you dad.
@mikecamz
@mikecamz 4 жыл бұрын
@Phil Anderson mine also. 37 years!
@brunnersamuel4615
@brunnersamuel4615 3 жыл бұрын
I'm 30 and it's the first time in my life I see a woman working.
@rbspider
@rbspider Жыл бұрын
In 1970 I worked at 8 Harrison Ave Boston. ( the outside of the building was used as the Headquarters for the all female Ghostbusters movie, it was down in the Combat Zone section of the city. You had to walk by all the strip clubs , peep shows and xrated movie and book businesses to get from subway to the office). There were two ESS machines in that building . I worked on the third floor ESS #1 . The other machine was on the seventh floor. I believe there was a Panel machine on the second floor and a number 5 crossbar on four or five. I wished I had taken pictures. It may have been forbidden to take pictures inside the building, I can't recall. When they changed the code it would take all night to updated the memory cards which I believe were 128 words x 56 bits. Each card was about seven inches by twelve . Just guessing , it's been almost fifty years.
@moki123g
@moki123g 9 ай бұрын
I swear that they sampled some of these telephone sounds for the movie war games.
@MsJamiewoods
@MsJamiewoods 3 жыл бұрын
I remember when the Wisconsin Telephone Company (a unit of ATT) activated ESS on the Appleton, Wis. exchanges in April, 1978. The dial tone frequency changed. Touch Tone service along with Call Waiting, Speed Dialing, Three-Way Calling, and Call Forwarding became available. Pay phones started changing from rotary dial to Touch Tone, and pay phones changed from 10 cents a call to 20 cents a call. However, pay phones became dial tone first which meant you did not need coins for 911, to reach an operator and for "800" calls. ESS also meant the City of Appleton was able start having 911 service.
@Schooney60606
@Schooney60606 3 жыл бұрын
Wow... All of this paved the way to the digital age we now live in. If only the early architects could see just how we've come- BILLIONS of transistors in a single small chip.
@michaelterrell
@michaelterrell 5 ай бұрын
Middletown Ohio received its first ESS in the mid '70s Armco Steel was hardhearted there, and they had a complete 10,000 line block of phone numbers reserved for them. It was using a 1920s switch that was so bad it could take over a minute to connect to another local phone. They told Ohio Bell that they would go private if the exchange wasn't replaced. Ohio Bell brought in a 10,000 line ESS in a tractor trailer and switched them to it. Then they added on to the Central Office building, and started installing five identical 10,000 line sections to upgrade the entire exchange. Without Armco forcing the issue, we were scheduled to wait almost 20 years to replace that CO. It was kept in operation with parts from small town COs that were updated, then salvaged the old equipment for parts. On busy days it took multiple attempts to place a call, and you were frequently connected to a dead pair.
@Fizbin32111
@Fizbin32111 8 жыл бұрын
Very impressive camera work.
@paulrowan1501
@paulrowan1501 7 жыл бұрын
It is almost unbelievable now to see the amount of handwork that went into these various processes. And to think this was just a step in the evolution of the technology and switching systems we have today. Note that almost all of the employees on the assembly lines were women.
@americanspirit8932
@americanspirit8932 2 жыл бұрын
Women, stay focused I believe better than men, which I am one of. I believe women can handle tedious repetition work better than men as well. Just my opinion, I am just generalizing.
@rbspider
@rbspider Жыл бұрын
@@americanspirit8932 I would not have been able to do what these women were doing. The assembly line would have driven me crazy . When I went to ESS school the instructor was telling me about diodes and how current would only flow in one direction. Until I had electron theory I couldn't understand how that was possible so I would cut apart the diodes they were testing to see what was inside and all I would find was a glass like substance. Now I feel bad for destroying their fine work.
@zAlaska
@zAlaska Жыл бұрын
The 85 million phones in actual use today
@rugcutter284
@rugcutter284 3 жыл бұрын
Is Paul Richards the narrator?
@SallySallySallySally
@SallySallySallySally 3 жыл бұрын
He sounds like Kevin McCarthy to me. (The actor, of course.)
@digitalrailroader
@digitalrailroader 7 жыл бұрын
6 million bits is only 750 Kilobytes. modern computer systems deal with terabytes of information now.
@tux8664
@tux8664 Жыл бұрын
and they are capable of addressing up to 16000 petabytes
@MrXminus1
@MrXminus1 4 жыл бұрын
I bet today all this is done by Machine and computer. More jobs lost.
@americanspirit8932
@americanspirit8932 2 жыл бұрын
I agree to a degree, many other jobs have been created, with your advancement of electronics and computers in general
@michaelterrell
@michaelterrell 5 ай бұрын
Work that could not be done by humans didn't take jobs from humans. The transistors and reed switches shown here were crude, even by 1980 standards. Early IC logic gates simplified the designs, and progressed from Small Scale Integration to Very Large Scale Integration over a few decades. In 2000, I worked to bring the first Software Defined Telemetry receiver to production. It had 14 microprocessors, and millions of transistors, yet it was only seven inches tall. With the technology in this video, it would have been impossible to build. Even if you could hve built iit it would cover several square miles and need its own power plant to run it.
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