Google
 

Aardvark Daily

The world's longest-running online daily news and commentary publication, now in its 30th year. The opinion pieces presented here are not purported to be fact but reasonable effort is made to ensure accuracy.

Content copyright © 1995 - 2025 to Bruce Simpson (aka Aardvark), the logo was kindly created for Aardvark Daily by the folks at aardvark.co.uk



Please visit the sponsor!
Please visit the sponsor!

The age of big iron

29 May 2026

Modern computers are small, fast, cost-effective and energy efficient.

that's not how things were back in the 1960s.

Back then, computers were huge, heavy, slow (by today's standards) and incredibly expensive. This was the era of the mainframe computer, a machine that often filled an entire floor of a building and required specialist climate control and dedicated fire-prevention systems.

This was the age of "big iron".

It's crazy to think that your average smartphone now has more memory, more storage and vastly more compute-power than those old big-iron systems -- yet that phone will slip snugly into your pocket and run all day on a single charge.

So why exactly were those mainframe computers so expensive?

From the outside, the rows of cabinets and spinning tape drives look impressive but nowhere near as impressive as they look on the inside.

Old mainframes had miles of wiring, quite a bit of it being laboriously hand-installed by skilled workers.

These machines also often relied on magnetic core memory which was, yet again, manufactured by teams of ladies with dainty fingers and staggering dexterity.

If you've ever wanted to see just how these gigantic computers of yester-year were built, take a look at the video below. I ran across this yesterday and found it absolutely fascinating:

It is perhaps only once you've seen the scale of these old boxes that you truly realise just how much we've crammed into today's modern CPUs and memory chips.

Right now I'm spending far too much time watching videos about the "big iron" era of computing and the more I watch, the more I'm in awe of the technology we have today.

It's kind of ironic however, that an industry that started with huge computers housed in climate-controlled environments and consuming massive amounts of power, is now headed back in the same direction, as AI datacentres become the backbone of modern computing.

We've come full circle perhaps?

Carpe Diem folks!

Please visit the sponsor!
Please visit the sponsor!

Here is a PERMANENT link to this column


Rank This Aardvark Page

 

Change Font

Sci-Tech headlines

 


Features:

The EZ Battery Reconditioning scam

Beware The Alternative Energy Scammers

The Great "Run Your Car On Water" Scam

 

Recent Columns

Why is everything so expensive?
I regularly trawl the pages of sites such as Ali Express looking for a bargain...

Con-Fusion?
Great news, practical, sustained, over-unity nuclear fusion reactors capable of connecting to the grid are now just a year away...

Won't someone think of the government?
We've seen a massive move, in many countries, to roll out age-gating of social media...

Time for more snake oil!
This happens every time something causes oil prices to spike...

What is happening to Bitcoin?
Something interesting is happening to the crypto-currency Bitcoin...

Smoke, mirrors and a leather jacket
Earlier this week I reported on NVIDIA's big announcement at Computex...

I have my own AI LLM now
There was a story on the newswires earlier this week which claimed that a US company had ended up with a half-billion dollar bill as the result of "enthusiastic" IA usage...

AI, the new attack vector
We are all told that AI is going to change the world and I don't doubt that for one minute...

Has NVIDIA just killed AMD and Intel?
Computex is underway in Taipei and although the rise of AI has meant that there have been very few "exciting" announcements...

The age of big iron
Modern computers are small, fast, cost-effective and energy efficient...