The Apollo 11 mission demonstrates that early computers with limited processing power (72 kilobytes) could successfully complete complex tasks when combined with meticulous human programming and careful error handling, as evidenced by Margaret Hamilton's team who wrote code by hand and managed critical system failures like the 1202 alarm during the moon landing.
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深掘り
NASA's 1969 Computer: Less Power Than Your Phone追加:
This calculator killed the moon.
July 20th, 1969.
Neil Armstrong is dropping toward the lunar surface, but his computer is screaming. The machine has 72 kilobytes of memory, less than a single low-resolution photo on your phone today.
Suddenly, a 1202 alarm flashes, meaning the system is literally choking on too much data.
Margaret Hamilton and her team wrote the code by hand, weaving wires through magnetic rings like a digital loom.
If one single copper wire is threaded incorrectly, the astronauts never come home.
Your modern smartphone is millions of times faster, yet we haven't been back since 1972.
Maybe the power wasn't in the silicon, but in the people.
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