In Your Defense: The SAGE System

Ғылым және технология

The SAGE (Semi-Automatic Ground Environment) System, was designed and built in the 1950s to defend against the threat of Soviet bombers attacking the continental United States. The system was much influenced by the design of MIT's Whirlwind II computer system (which was never completed). IBM designed and built the AN/FSQ-7 computer, the heart of the SAGE program, with companies such as Western Electric (who produced In Your Defense), The Mitre Corporation and System Development Corporation were also major contractors on the project.
There were more than twenty SAGE installations located across North America linking hundreds of radar stations, Air Force fighter wings, and missle defense sites in the first large-scale computer communications network. The SAGE network was decentralized and would allow a unit to continue operation even if other sites were disabled. As the Soviet attack threat shifted from long-range bombers to nuclear missles in the 1960's, the SAGE system became less strategic. However, parts of the system continued operation into the early 1980's.
This film explains the national security threats of the 1950's and 60's that SAGE was built to defend against, shows the SAGE computer and network in operation and simulates how SAGE would react to an attack on the United States.
Catalog Number: 102651595

Пікірлер: 376

  • @thomasjordan5483
    @thomasjordan54839 жыл бұрын

    Trained on SAGE ANFSQ7 at Keesler AFB Mississippi in 1962 and finish education at NYADS by IBM in 1963 in the maintenance of the central computer (we were known as CC or Central Computer techs). Started to learn COBOL while at McGuire for 3 years and set me up for a great career as a programmer/systems analyst and project manager. I owe the Air force a lot. Some of the best years of my life.

  • @MrJest2

    @MrJest2

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Thomas Jordan My dad was a life-long IBMer. He at one point was involved with the NYADS group. He loved to tell this story about an inter-group competition within IBM, where cheering on your team was encouraged ("team-building" exorcizes were common at IBM in those days). So, obviously, their team cheer was: "Go NYADS!!!" :-)

  • @johnhopkins6260

    @johnhopkins6260

    6 жыл бұрын

    wow, flashbacks from Keesler (never forgot the cockroaches) (1977)... moved on to 407L Mobile TACS

  • @ratzabur

    @ratzabur

    5 жыл бұрын

    Is there a way to compare the computing power of the SAGE system to todays devices?

  • @donwat91

    @donwat91

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@johnhopkins6260 John , I too was sent to a 407L after tech school. I had been in Base Supply for 6 years and was cross trained. I was sent to Shaw AFB,SC , 507th TACCS , COMBAT OPERATION. Spend 2 years there and sent remote to Indian Mountain AFS ,AK and then back to Shaw AFB. 507th a year and moved to 9th AF , DOY as supervisor of TACS for all of the 407L equipment and enlisted personnel. I hated to be at a desk . So a slot opened at 7th ACCS , ABCCC flying EC-130E . So the last 10 year's I flew with them. Best job I ever had. Where did the 407L take you? Oh , for 14 years as a RADAR OPERATOR, I only sit at a RADAR SCOPE for one year.

  • @johnhopkins6260

    @johnhopkins6260

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@donwat91 sent straight to USAFE TACS (TCF/TCS/TACP); filled the gap where the Brits were pulling out of northern FRG (2ATAF), and the Dutch were pulling out of their Hawk/Nike sites... never remote, little Stateside (except cross-training at Hurlburt and Pope...), babysat the Fahad line.

  • @SynchroScore
    @SynchroScore7 жыл бұрын

    And as a nice side-effect of this project, it was discovered that multiple computers scattered around the country could be connected together to share information. SAGE was basically the first iteration of the Internet.

  • @markavant5046

    @markavant5046

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't call it discovered. But yes, the TCP/IP was developed by DARPA to allow Command and Control communications without a single point of failure.

  • @jimbailey5031
    @jimbailey50319 жыл бұрын

    The AN/FSQ-7/8 SAGE computers were the most advanced computers in the world in their time. I am blessed to have been a part of this historic portal into digital computer technology. I was trained to install and maintain the system at the IBM Factory in Kingston, NY in 1961 and worked on the systems at Truax Field, Madison, WI until 1965. I owe my 50+ year career to SAGE computers. If you were not there you could never embrace the significance of what we were doing.

  • @DaYeenQueen

    @DaYeenQueen

    9 жыл бұрын

    Jim Bailey Thats awesome!

  • @jimbailey5031

    @jimbailey5031

    9 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! It was an interesting experience! 56,000 vacuum tubes, 2500 miles of wire. The first modems and light guns and rotating magnetic drum memory. ☺

  • @DaYeenQueen

    @DaYeenQueen

    9 жыл бұрын

    Jim Bailey wow! That's insane lol, I can't imagine even seeing that inperson let alone doing anything with it.

  • @soviet9922

    @soviet9922

    9 жыл бұрын

    Jim Bailey This pice of shit will be nuked to the ground by soviet ICBM

  • @jimbailey5031

    @jimbailey5031

    9 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, soviet9992!

  • @davidshepard3708
    @davidshepard37084 жыл бұрын

    I trained at Keesler in 1981-82 and was at the 25 ADS for two years. What an amazing education that was, indescribable.

  • @j.p.wagner6461

    @j.p.wagner6461

    2 жыл бұрын

    Me too: Keesler, '82-'83 .. EW school .. 328X3 .. Allie Hall .. Hewes Hall .. tubes, transistors, ICs, klystrons, magnetrons, twts, chaff, TXs, RXs, TRXs, .. remember ?

  • @basilbcf

    @basilbcf

    2 жыл бұрын

    Keesler 72-73 - Ended up at 24th ADS.

  • @brucehorvat2339
    @brucehorvat23393 жыл бұрын

    Those of us who served in the USAF in the '50s and '60s blazed the trail with the SAGE systems and computers. Those systems did move with less memory and speed than most of the stuff I see today. I served from 1961 to 1965 as an AN/FSQ-7 repairman at Truax AFS 4631st Support Sq. (30551 B1). We were ChADS, Chicago Air Defense Sector and we often tracked over 350 aircraft at any one time with less compute power and storage than found on my cell phone (it is not an Iphone). We blazed the trail which is still being followed today. Nothing I see today impresses me.

  • @21Laser
    @21Laser8 жыл бұрын

    From what I know, until 1983, SAGE was operational until a more modern follow on system was put into place. Amazing that vacuum tubes saved our lives until then.

  • @garyodle5663

    @garyodle5663

    8 жыл бұрын

    I was a SAGE Intercept Director in the 70's. Odd thing is that by then we bought a lot of our tubes from eastern Europe because they were no longer made in the United States.

  • @scottgoodrich5825
    @scottgoodrich58255 жыл бұрын

    I was a Weapons Tech at the Hancock Field blockhouse. Also a Faker Monitor Tech. 1978-1981.

  • @Arabhacks
    @Arabhacks10 жыл бұрын

    The problem was, by the time SAGE was finished, ICBMs were out, and they were faster than SAGE could deal with. One thing that has returned from that era are radar that operate from 420 to 450 MHz, they can detect stealth aircraft.

  • @pyro4002

    @pyro4002

    4 жыл бұрын

    Just because nuclear weapons found a new means of delivery didn't make SAGE any less important as a system for monitoring and evaluating air traffic across the continent. It operated for 24 years and surely formed the basis for future developments in NORAD, it was a colossal success.

  • @jefferysurratt5650

    @jefferysurratt5650

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sage was not used to counter ICBMs, it was used to shoot Bombers out of the sky and automatically direct F-106 Delta Dart Interceptor Aircraft to Offset points to launch an attack.

  • @markavant5046

    @markavant5046

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was a Computer Maintenance Crew Chief for the Q-7 at Ft. Lee VA in 80. When we would watch the war games on the maintenance consoles, I would joke that if the balloon went up, we would not be around to intercept Bombers. I imagine we were targeted by at least a couple of Soviet missile warheads.

  • @laurarey9036
    @laurarey90362 жыл бұрын

    Trained at Keesler in 1962 and was assigned to the Los Angeles ADS in 1963-66. Worked the ID section after the basic track monitor duties and a stint in the radio room listening to Russian trawler chatter trying to mess with our B-52s. I think I could still operate one of those consoles after about a week of retraining. Tom REY, A1C

  • @dbradley3
    @dbradley34 жыл бұрын

    Given the historic timeframe of this Air Force film, one would expect much more cigarette smoking. Cigarettes and bad coffee were dietary staples in SAC.

  • @brucehorvat2339

    @brucehorvat2339

    3 жыл бұрын

    As they were at a SAGE.

  • @cyberyogicowindler2448

    @cyberyogicowindler2448

    Жыл бұрын

    They should have been addicts of *sage* tea. ;-)

  • @rumls4drinkin

    @rumls4drinkin

    Жыл бұрын

    my grandfather said he smoked 3 packs a day when he worked there.

  • @GaryCameron

    @GaryCameron

    11 ай бұрын

    The SAGE terminals actually included an ashtray. One of the things I don't miss about the past.

  • @sherrigittings-gurkin8542
    @sherrigittings-gurkin85422 жыл бұрын

    My Dad was with IBM from 1958-1994 and worked on the SAGE System.

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    5 ай бұрын

    Where was he stationed? 63-66I was at NYADS at Mcguire AFB covering the NY secror. The way things are going now thats not much to brage about.

  • @davidwise1302
    @davidwise13026 жыл бұрын

    When I went through tech school at Keesler in 1977, all we got were stories about the SAGE, including the dire consequences should the air conditioning ever go out (heat from the vacuum tubes would kill everybody in the building and start to melt the racks, etc). We did train on the BUIC (Back-Up Interceptor Control), a Burroughs transistor system, which had been intended to supplement and replace the SAGE. The BUIC just could not process as much data as the SAGE and was itself phased out. I ended up working on the SACCS data communication system, AKA "the two-ton telephone".

  • @markavant5046

    @markavant5046

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was told the Entire blockhouse was never heated only cooled. All of the consoles used also put out a ton of heat also. I worked on both the Q-7 at Ft. Lee and the BUIC at Tyndall AFB. In 80 I went to training at Hughes Defense in Fullerton CA on the Joint Surveillance system that was finally going to replace the Q-7. We were the first group to be trained on the JSS. The first site was going to be located at Tyndall. The project was behind schedule so when I got to Tyndall I was assigned to the BUIC system until the JSS facility was ready. I never got to work on the JSS since I had to get a humanitarian reassignment back to England in my Primary AFSC of Fire Protection.

  • @jdcrunchman999
    @jdcrunchman9997 жыл бұрын

    I was in the USAF 64-68. I was trained on repairing radar and GATR (Ground, air, transmitters, receivers). All were using tube technology. There was no satellite communication then, and most communication involved "troposcatter", a medium range (500 - 1500 miles) communication system. Was all hooked into NORAD and SAGE. A lot of these systems are replaced by newer systems I would suspect. As this document describes, the "scope dope" places a cursor on a target, sends a signal (azimuth and other info) to a height finder radar, then they press a button, and the elevation is stored in the computers. All were using a data connection which is slow by todays standards. I was also in Tech School at Keesler AFB, the main USAF electronic school. At that time, there was a lot of VietNamese Air force students being trained as well.

  • @basilbcf
    @basilbcf10 жыл бұрын

    I was a maintenance man on the SAGE computer system at 24th NORAD Region, Malmstrom AFB, MT in the early 70s. It was an amazing piece of equipment for its day.

  • @KaliszAd

    @KaliszAd

    10 жыл бұрын

    Did you ever write about that time? I mean, the story from your point of view? It could be an interesting article. Btw. today, those vacuum tubes would be most likely invaluable for audio enthusiasts. They were of very high quality and a computer like that would have thousands of spare parts. (For an amplifier, you just need a few VTs).

  • @nicholasfazzolari3647

    @nicholasfazzolari3647

    10 жыл бұрын

    ***** At the time did you imagine that computers would be consumer devices with widespread usages? What kind of education did you have to complete to work on these systems. I have some many questions for you... I'm in Oregon - where was this happening. I want to see the buildings!

  • @stephenjeffrey5974

    @stephenjeffrey5974

    6 жыл бұрын

    I was the last radio repair tech at the 24th when we shut it down in 1983. I maintained the TDDL equipment, and worked in the computer repair lab as well. It was quite the place. :)

  • @basilbcf

    @basilbcf

    6 жыл бұрын

    I recently visited with a former coworker who was a Maintenance Superintendent when I was there. He now lives in Alamogordo, NM. He and another fellow I know where still in Great Falls when they shut down the system and they were asked to come and "flip the switch" that shut down the computer. One of the guys there was able to snag a few souvenirs and he send me a piece of the core memory that was in that system. I still have that core memory in my office.

  • @basilbcf

    @basilbcf

    6 жыл бұрын

    Are you talking about the "Pluggable Unit Lab" on the second floor, where they repaired the Pluggable Units that were pulled by the Computer Maintenance folks? That's where I worked when I first arrived at 24th but then after a year, I moved down to the main computer and eventually became qualified in every area (Displays, I/O, Central Computer, Memory, CEP, etc). I was there for almost 7 years and left min-1979.

  • @panaflex
    @panaflex14 жыл бұрын

    The Almaden air force base on Mt Umunhum in the Santa Cruz Mountians near San Jose, CA was a SAGE installation. The "cube" building that housed the radar and SAGE system still exists and sits vacant overlooking the valley.

  • @MrShobar
    @MrShobar8 жыл бұрын

    The Army Nike missile system had its own mini-SAGE system known variously as Missile Master, Missile Mentor, or BIRDIE.

  • @0MoTheG
    @0MoTheG8 жыл бұрын

    What I liked the most is the GUI. The screens could draw fine lines as well as letters and one could point at things.

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    Жыл бұрын

    And the remote communications led the way to remote computing and the internet.

  • @MaxKoschuh
    @MaxKoschuh9 жыл бұрын

    The building is still standing. Adair Village. Next to Hwy 99. Google Maps: 44.670955, -123.219812

  • @davidca96
    @davidca967 жыл бұрын

    Its amazing what they were able to do with such weak computing power. It still amazes me in the form of space equipment now. We use cpu's in space that are from the 90's, yet they use them so efficiently that they can go to Mars and drive around, etc.

  • @lifeforce3451
    @lifeforce34519 жыл бұрын

    these old videos are amazing and full of details !

  • @fredericktaylor2891
    @fredericktaylor2891Ай бұрын

    I was an ECCM tech, we were a small group charged with frontline data analysis and control at long range radar sites since extraneous data could overload the memory cores of the Q-7. We were also responsible for overseeing that the systems were functioning within established parameters such as alignment with a permanent echo, power output, system noise levels and frequency drift on klystron-based systems just to mention a few. We were also responsible for data transfers to BUIC sites when level 2 operation was ordered by the direction center.

  • @DarkEmperor009
    @DarkEmperor00911 жыл бұрын

    wow this is so cool! I didn't realize this project ever existed!

  • @nancyfew
    @nancyfew11 жыл бұрын

    How little you know. SAGE was active from 1950, 62 years ago, up to sometime in the 1980's. Tracks came up as Friendly or Unknown, then the ID section determined whether they were Friendly and not squawking the right code, or Hostile. It was quite an advancement at the time, and was the driving force for todays' laptops and iPhones. The Military systems are often the basis for new development which benefits the public.

  • @Neojhun
    @Neojhun12 жыл бұрын

    One of the few good things to come out of Cold War fearmongers. The SAGE Display system would influece the inventors of the GUI for computers.

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer306 жыл бұрын

    9 years later and still here!

  • @MightySaturn5
    @MightySaturn515 жыл бұрын

    excellent video...very interesting and informative

  • @pacifiky
    @pacifiky6 ай бұрын

    Those vector displays are so cool

  • @hckyplyr9285
    @hckyplyr928511 жыл бұрын

    Really insightful comment. Brilliant in its abject ignorance. Lots of that here. SAGE and the FSQ-7 computer programmed pioneered numerous technologies you rely on today. Like the phone another commenter is so proud of. The computer was the first mass produced computer ever. The first touch screen displays were pioneered in SAGE. In fact, IBM took the work they did for SAGE and produced the IBM 360, the first widely used business computer. In fact, defense has led to many commercial spinoffs.

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    5 ай бұрын

    Actually they weren't touch screens as w know them now. You had to use a light gun whick used the screen display by timing the display.

  • @artmaknev3738
    @artmaknev37382 жыл бұрын

    Its amazing, without radars we would not have transistors, without transistors would not have computers. The massive room computer in this video is still using vacuum tubes I think.

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    5 ай бұрын

    There was a seperate room for the actual computers and a common room for both maintenance consoles. I'll never forget the speaker squacking as the processor worked. We got so we tuned it out of our hearing but when it stopped we new instantly the active computer stoppes working. Great experience and gave me great headstart on learning to programin COBOL from the civiian contractors! The claxton horn that went off wnetever they syitched generators cost me my hearing but it was worth it. (darned thing was about 10 foot behind ne while I was working at one of the consoles.

  • @jeroen79
    @jeroen7915 жыл бұрын

    In a way, yes. These were cathode ray tubes and the picture was drawn by sweeping an electronbeam over the screen. When a point on the screen is struck it will light up and then slowly fade. On todays PC CRT screens you often see a brighter or dimmer horizontal bar moving over the screen. This is because the camera will rapidly take individul pictures and on these the lighting and fading can be seen. Also, the rate of the diplay and the camera may not be synchronised.

  • @rotaryphoton137
    @rotaryphoton1377 жыл бұрын

    Did anyone notice the alarm sound is a kid beating broken swing set pipe on the ground @16:33?

  • @dcb1138
    @dcb113816 жыл бұрын

    The entire system has the computing power of a modern day cell phone. But cost 1/3 the GNP.

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    5 ай бұрын

    Each systen had 64k of 36 bit words of memory and another 256k was added. Not even as much as a digital watch much less a cell phone. GOD bless the designers of that system! At times I am ashamed at where personal compters are today and would give up my life to have them disappear!

  • @Forensource
    @Forensource10 жыл бұрын

    The SAGE building at Beale AFB is humongous. Amazing to realize that all of the computing power in the building is about equal to an IPAD. The whole thing was connected with 300 baud modems and a zillion phone lines.

  • @Zoomer30

    @Zoomer30

    5 жыл бұрын

    Forensource An IPad probably exceeds it in power by a large margin. You could create apps to do all of this.

  • @Caseytify

    @Caseytify

    2 жыл бұрын

    An iPad hardly has the capability to handle the mass of incoming data. It's not just about the MIPS. ... On the other hand, they _were_ using vacuum tubes.

  • @activelow9297

    @activelow9297

    2 жыл бұрын

    An ipad has nowhere near the IO capacity of a typical 60's mainframe, let alone the entire SAGE nework.

  • @Forensource

    @Forensource

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@activelow9297 The SAGE in that building was two AN/FSQ-7 in tandem. How fast was an AN/FSQ-7 in 1960 compared to an IPAD in 2022? Humf.

  • @activelow9297

    @activelow9297

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Forensource Read my comment.. an iPad has nowhere near the I/O capacity of a 60's mainframe. Speed is less important than getting data in and out of the machine quickly and to the right task. Comparing a mainframe to a modern PC/tablet is apples and oranges.

  • @jeroen79
    @jeroen7915 жыл бұрын

    Notice the 'guns' the operators are holding to the screen? When the part of the screen under it lights up these will send a signal to the computer. the computer knows what it was drawing at that moment so it will know where the gun is on the screen. In this way the operator can 'click' on something.

  • @bcyaden
    @bcyaden11 жыл бұрын

    We went to the moon with a DSKY computer with hard wired memory and total of 74 KB. There is one at the Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum in McMinnville Oregon

  • @tiger2338
    @tiger233811 жыл бұрын

    One of them is in Canada and was until three years ago completely underground. It is at CFB North Bay. I believe you can tour the new building.

  • @argha2091
    @argha20915 жыл бұрын

    Onece you work for IBM you always a IBM'r I have great respect for the company I use to work for.

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    5 ай бұрын

    Too bad you don't even hear about them any more. Once so powerful and one stupid mistake allowing MicroSoft to copy the operating system cost them so much!

  • @cnmnnaturalist
    @cnmnnaturalist Жыл бұрын

    If you drive by the airport on Highway 53 in Duluth, Minnesota you'll see a large mostly windowless building housing the Natural Resources Research Institute. It used to be a SAGE center.

  • @jwaustinmunguy
    @jwaustinmunguy11 жыл бұрын

    The FSQ-7 had 500,000 words of memory. Each word was made up of 36 bits.

  • @l_jasper9225
    @l_jasper92258 жыл бұрын

    I am doing a essay about Cold War air defence, so thanks for the video.

  • @codeoptimizationware2803
    @codeoptimizationware28034 жыл бұрын

    @Computer History Museum: @ 0:09 the date is hard to read. What year does that say?

  • @PatcoGeorge
    @PatcoGeorge11 ай бұрын

    I was a scope dope at the 4634th Sage Support Squadron, READS, Reno Air Defense Sector from 1963-1966 when sage was closed down at Stead AFB just north of Reno, NV. I wish I could attach a KMZ file I made that shows all the Sage Direction Centers using Google Earth. Was on A crew and worked tracking, OT, and manual inputs. Those were the days.

  • @johnhopkins6260
    @johnhopkins62604 жыл бұрын

    wow... blast from the past I was a 276, worked the 485L system (can still write backwards)

  • @kenschnable428
    @kenschnable4284 жыл бұрын

    I worked in the Air Force at the SAGE DC in Topsham, Maine 62-66. If you look at an satellite view now it is all gone.

  • @jazz4asahel

    @jazz4asahel

    Жыл бұрын

    I saw the SAGE building at Topsham in 1974. It was out of use at that time, of course. I was a Navy Radioman Second Class and amateur radio operator totally enthralled by the blockhouse the USAF had left behind at Topsham. I lived in a Barrack at Topsham and worked at the Navy communication center at NAS Brunswick, now closed. I would love to know more about the vacuum tubes used in the SAGE computer system. You were fortunate to have worked with that equipment, yes?

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    5 ай бұрын

    Maybe you can call it fortunate but didn't feel that way to us at the time! We at CC (Central Computer changed out more plugable units that either the display or I/O people so we kept them busy in the repair lab. Some idiot even suggested we wear roller skates to get the plug-in modules but turned out to be too dangerous because a low of guys couldn't skate very well. @@jazz4asahel

  • @rick3514
    @rick35142 жыл бұрын

    It took 15 seconds for that system to process all the data. with aircraft moving at high speed including Mach the location of aircraft were behind where they actually were. During training missions with a lot of aircraft involved, frame time could get as high as 30 seconds and higher. So the aircraft display on the radar scope would be way off from where they actually were. I was at the 26th Air Division/NORAD Region-Luke AFB. from 1976 thru 1980, worked in weapons control. The whole system was done away with in the early 1980's and replaced with new off the shelf computers and the old systems SAGE were scraped out around 1983.

  • @cyberyogicowindler2448

    @cyberyogicowindler2448

    Жыл бұрын

    Did the computer screens really flash that slow (tube computers were clocked in kHz, not MHz), or is this a filming artefact? I know that CRT vector monitors (also arcade videogames etc.) are definitely the hardest task to film flickerfree because they had no constant frame rate. This film reel deserves to be re-digitized in modern resolution.

  • @miguelnogueira2719
    @miguelnogueira271911 жыл бұрын

    You have all that because of SAGE and Whirlwind development, things like smart phones didnt just magically appear

  • @irish89055
    @irish8905512 жыл бұрын

    True, my father was FAA liaison to NORAD from 64-94,he worked in several SAGE facilities before NORAD HQ. I have a framed photo of a Russian Bear being escorted by F-15's out of Langley. They would fly up from Cuba along the east coast to Russia...

  • @brianr987
    @brianr9876 жыл бұрын

    All of these old films are very cool. Too bad they don’t get into the lower level details of how these systems worked, from an engineering perspective. Most of these films are propaganda.

  • @johneygd

    @johneygd

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah they should,ve atleast mention that those workers used a light pen to mark suspecting targets and other things.

  • @markavant5046

    @markavant5046

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well, that was all classified data at the time. There is a Book out called "AN/FSQ-7: the computer that shaped the Cold War" It is completely about the engineering and design.

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer306 жыл бұрын

    The capacitor drum they showed was a copy of the one used on the ABC (Atanasoff Berry Computer).

  • @TheUglyGnome

    @TheUglyGnome

    5 жыл бұрын

    I highly doubt they used capacitor drums in SAGE. More likely they were magnetic drums.

  • @j.sebring6136

    @j.sebring6136

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@TheUglyGnome They were magnetic drums. Some were used to buffer the data rates between the CPU and the slower display systems. Read one word, skip 5, etc.

  • @RaptorPrinter
    @RaptorPrinter27 күн бұрын

    Very cool.

  • @GREENTAMBOURINE
    @GREENTAMBOURINE16 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of the 1960s Ken Russell film "The Billion Dollar Brain" (Len Deighton). also, in the early 1980s cards and reel-to-reel were still in use to regulate machinery in a steel mill where I worked.

  • @thomasjordan5483
    @thomasjordan5483 Жыл бұрын

    Not while I was stationed at McGuire NYADS. I think they closed it down right after I left . I left in May 1966 (a month early to attend college).

  • @badbobbyhughes
    @badbobbyhughes13 жыл бұрын

    if i was to enter a room with so many lights and dials and buttons, i'd have to be restrained and sedated

  • @tempetiger
    @tempetiger11 жыл бұрын

    Look at the map at 5:25 and afterward. Notice the largef white dot over Arizona. Is that at the Ft. Hauchuca Army base? Just curious.

  • @jefferysurratt5650

    @jefferysurratt5650

    4 жыл бұрын

    Luke AFB has a major Fighter Wing and SAGE center is close to Phoenix, AZ, it being a major metropolitan area needed the many jobs that these systems required both military and civilian jobs still drive DoD spending today

  • @DavidG2P
    @DavidG2P Жыл бұрын

    How many Gigaflops does the main SAGE computer have?

  • @kmoss1122
    @kmoss112213 жыл бұрын

    I really dunno why I like watching vintage computer videos, they just really seem interesting

  • @n9brb
    @n9brb5 жыл бұрын

    The SAGE bldg at Richards-Gebauer still stands, though is used for manufacturing now.

  • @klbird
    @klbird8 жыл бұрын

    I wonder what they did with all that old hardware/ sell it on the surplus market or just scrap them? Or they could be sitting in a governent warehouse someplace with Indiana Jones Ark.

  • @Flipperhome

    @Flipperhome

    8 жыл бұрын

    A lot of it ended up as movie props, and some real impressive ones at that. From Lost In Space. Get Smart. Fantastic Voyage. In Like Flint. The Towering Inferno and The Six Million Dollar Man to Independence Day (plus a whole raft more).

  • @klbird

    @klbird

    8 жыл бұрын

    That was some creative recycling!

  • @jeffreycoulter4095

    @jeffreycoulter4095

    4 жыл бұрын

    Cal Poly San Luis Obispo acquired one, and was still using it when I left in 1989. The vacuum tube, gylcol cooled room heater was reliable, easy to repair on the fly, a good machine for teaching students to program computers. However, the electrical costs to operate, the diminishing available parts and the introduction of pc's to student, reduced the desire by university administration to keep it. The CDC tech told me that other like computers were being sold to foreign governments and institutions in third world. But, I suspect by the mid 1990's, even those would be scrapped. I once saw a computer graveyard at Midway Atoll and another in Alaska, where the computers were piled. The federal agency that I worked for , came up with a cradle to grave policy, when they wanted to kill your project, but bought new computers every year, whether you needed it or not.

  • @ToumalRakesh
    @ToumalRakesh4 жыл бұрын

    THERE IS ANOTHER SYSTEM - THERE IS ANOTHER SYSTEM - THERE IS ANOTHER SYSTEM

  • @Cassia-Aurea
    @Cassia-Aurea13 жыл бұрын

    @Datan0de And yet -- it was multitasking, multiuser and networked...with GUI...

  • @matkovicha
    @matkovicha15 жыл бұрын

    Cool!

  • @michaelb9529
    @michaelb95292 жыл бұрын

    Sad the RCAF used to provide about 1/3 of the interceptor for NORAD with day, night and all weather jets. Also had Bomarc Missiles some nuclear tipped and some interceptors were armed with nuclear tipped Genie air to air missiles. Today we are lucky if the ancient CF-18 makes it off the runway without breaking down. Best pilots oldest dwindling fighters

  • @jwaustinmunguy
    @jwaustinmunguy12 жыл бұрын

    @camposantoo The German system of WW II was similar to the British system. Both of these used GCI or Ground Controlled Intercept. There was a similar system in Germany but this was not implemented until the 1970's. NADGE or NATO Air Defence Ground Environment. One of their SOC's was in the 'Kindsbach Cave' which is described elsewhere. You can read a lot about the RAF systems and especially their approach to defeating the German Air Defense systems at the RAF Historical Society.

  • @atpcfi
    @atpcfi15 жыл бұрын

    Everything you see in the movie was true. As I was stationed at the Washington Air Defense Sector (WADS) 1961 to 1962. Long after SAGE was disbanded I saw some of the displays being used in Hollywood sifi movies.

  • @mspeaceandlove1997
    @mspeaceandlove199711 жыл бұрын

    this one helped me a lot !

  • @gorillaau
    @gorillaau8 жыл бұрын

    Why do the screen all flash at the same time? I assume that they work on a very different principle to modern crt screens.

  • @Sys-Edit0r-1995

    @Sys-Edit0r-1995

    7 жыл бұрын

    from what heard they were low refresh screens (long phosphor persistence) this is probably because the system couldn't constantly refresh the screens since it was busy computing.

  • @richardvernon317

    @richardvernon317

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes they did. TV CRT's used a Raster scan which refreshed the screen between 25 and 29 times a second (the later is the US standard). The radar PPI (Plan Position Indicator) CRT on the other hand used a system that took the bearing of the radar antenna and used it to produce two pairs of Sawtooth waveforms which pushed /pulled the electron beam across the screen for the Raw radar video. The typical Air Defence radar for the time transmitted 250 large pluses of radio energy (1 megawatt or more) for around 5 microseconds. The Radar then listened for around 3000 microseconds for any echos. This gave the radar a maximum range of around 250 miles. While the radar was transmitting it was also turning at around 6 RPM, giving one 360 scan every 10 seconds or so. The radar's bearing was taken by data sensors and that controlled the maximum amplitude of the sawtooth wave patten, while its duration equaled the listening time of the radar with the start of the slope being synchronized to the time at which the radar started listening and the electron beam being at the center of the tube (know as X (North / South) and Y (East / West). The saw tooth waveform was fed to deflection coils around the neck of the CRT and would move the beam in a line equal to the direction of the radar antenna at the rate that the radio signal would take to go out to 250 miles and back If the beam was allowed to on all the time it would draw a solid line from the center of the screen to the edge which would turn at 6 RPM. This was used on some systems in a video map system which would scan a slide with a map on it and display it the signal picked up by a photoelectric cell on the CRT at the same time as the radar data. In the case of the PPI console though, the electron beam would only be allow to reach the phosphor if there was a radar return (or signal from the video map unit). Now 3005 microseconds x 250 equals about 0.75 seconds and the radar needed a short period to sort itself out before transmitting the next pulse of radio energy. During this 1 millisecond period (known as the intertrace) x 250 times a second the display wasn't doing anything and this allowed the computer to generate various graphics on the screen by putting various sawtooth and squarewave signals on the deflection coils and allowing a bright up pulse to the electron beam to show them on the screen. This allowed lines and circles to be drawn very much like vector graphics in Coraldraw. The rest of the symbols, letters, numbers and other data were most likely not generated by the computer bar what data was needed to be displayed and its position. This was fed to a system that fired a number of devices called Monoscopes that were basically like a video map but used its own scanning system to electronically scan a plate with a symbol on it to produce the required small X and y deflection signals, plus an electron beam bright up signal to draw that symbol on the CRT. The actual position of the symbol on the CRT being based around a bigger X and Y deflection squarewave generated by the computer. The computer could not draw all of this information on the CRT every intra trace but did it over about 20 to 25 of them and then started again, The reason for this is the Human eye refreshes its view of the world around 7 times a second and any screen refresh lower than 9 times a second will cause the screen to flicker, like on the film. The reason for the flicker on the film is due to two reasons, firstly the film does not have an exposure capability anywhere like that of the human eye and secondly its frame rate is 24 frames a second. Therefore the CRT display will strobe with the film in the camara and not show what was actually on the display.

  • @Sys-Edit0r-1995

    @Sys-Edit0r-1995

    7 жыл бұрын

    Richard Vernon I actually found some manuals on the AN/FSQ-7 and the display system on the net, and apparently it used a type of picture tube that has a character matrix that would shine an unfocused beam into the matrix, shining out the character or pictograph (called a typotron, I believe) And it was deflected back to the center of the tube to later be deflected again to the screen. This way the computer didn't have to commit more time to vector draw images. Of cause I don't know EVERYTHING about it because I just looked a the diagrams instead of reading all the text :/ If you want to see said manuals I can send you the bitsavers link.

  • @davidwise1302

    @davidwise1302

    6 жыл бұрын

    That is an artifact of the filming process. They used vector graphics in which the electron beam would be blanked, moved to a starting point, then turned on and moved to draw a symbol or a line. The light gun (their version of a mouse) would detect when the symbol it was on was being refreshed and the console would associate that with screen coordinates and hence the symbol being selected. Filming captures an image at least 25 to 30 times per second in order to simulate motion (then display each image twice at a 60 Hz rate to eliminate flicker -- same thing with raster scan TVs). So sometimes the camera caught the displays when they were refreshing, but more often not. BTW, when you see airplane propellers "reverse direction" in a movie, that is also an artifact of the filming process called "aliasing".

  • @someguy4915

    @someguy4915

    6 жыл бұрын

    Today it works similar, displays are updated only on set moments but instead of this system which clearly shows that, today it is done 60 times per second or even up to 144 times per second, making it impossible to notice with the naked eye.

  • @alroybarrow
    @alroybarrow8 жыл бұрын

    Those fighter interceptors were f100 super sabres.

  • @Cactijellyfish

    @Cactijellyfish

    8 жыл бұрын

    Those on the ground were F-104's, both my favorite planes.

  • @artwright3128
    @artwright31288 жыл бұрын

    SIDS and DIDS. Remember them well. Work in the SAGE complex, Luke AFB, Glendale, AZ from 1976 to 1984.

  • @WarrenPostma

    @WarrenPostma

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Art Wright How accurate was the film in depicting the refresh rates of the radar CRTs? It looked like vector redraw/refresh rates were on the order of 0.75 to 1.0 seconds per update.

  • @russellhltn1396

    @russellhltn1396

    7 жыл бұрын

    Probably not good. Too much blank time. I think it's beating against the camera's frame rate. (I'm guessing that would be 24fps.)

  • @WarrenPostma

    @WarrenPostma

    7 жыл бұрын

    That makes sense. It seems unusable if it really looked the way the camera sees it.

  • @seismicrock6849

    @seismicrock6849

    6 жыл бұрын

    That building still sits on the east side of Litchfield Road, next to the base hospital. What happened after Air Defense Command was ended in ~1970?

  • @cyberyogicowindler2448

    @cyberyogicowindler2448

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WarrenPostma That's likely a filming artefact due to unequal (and varying) vector display framerate.

  • @ufoengines
    @ufoengines9 жыл бұрын

    Ran across this old patent 3190554 on a digital computer that ran on air. Wonder if anything was done with the idea.

  • @cyberyogicowindler2448

    @cyberyogicowindler2448

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd love to build a music synthesizer with fluidics. These circuits scream for becoming 3D printed. In 1960th fluidics was thought to replace electronics for making cheap mass produced computers! Apparently it got mainly used by soviets. kzread.info/dash/bejne/YmWdy7x-f9q2obA.html It was too slow and big to compete with microchips, despite this cheap cybernetic technology could control household devices like washing machines by water (or air) pushed through a simple moulded piece of plastic. The only household item with success were Tomy water games. Nowadays fluidics is only used in chemical testing machines to mix and move small substance droplets around.

  • @ufoengines

    @ufoengines

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cyberyogicowindler2448 Was thinking if Babbage had this tech the Pipe Organ folks could have built his computer and Lady Ada could have invented COBOL . Cool huh? If you have an address I could sent what I have on this idea.

  • @ufoengines

    @ufoengines

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cyberyogicowindler2448 This nice lady Fran talked up my info. pack on the FLODAC. you can see it at 8:15 kzread.info/dash/bejne/Z6Wb2tWDoJuzis4.html . 3D printing up a FLODAC to calculate log tables would be kinda hip.

  • @cyberyogicowindler2448

    @cyberyogicowindler2448

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ufoengines In an alternate universe orchestrion makers and not war industry could have invented the computer.

  • @southwestxnorthwest
    @southwestxnorthwest Жыл бұрын

    "One of the most dangerous threats to our nation's security is the possibility of attack by enemy bombers..." _(shows clip of a squadron of B-52 bombers)_

  • @Ye4rZero
    @Ye4rZero11 жыл бұрын

    Great vid. "Here's your multi billion dollar nuclear and conventional weapons system. But the really HARD part is to know out what it's doing. For that we'll need a compUTer."

  • @wysoft
    @wysoft11 жыл бұрын

    yes, many are still in place, but most are located on air force/army bases. see the SAGE wikipedia page.

  • @Sys-Edit0r-1995
    @Sys-Edit0r-199510 жыл бұрын

    this be cool to see as a miniature using transistors instead of tubes or 1980's IC's

  • @cyberyogicowindler2448

    @cyberyogicowindler2448

    Жыл бұрын

    Likely much of it could be nowadays emulated on an FPGA chip. But likely the original software anyway got destroyed in the name of military secrecy.

  • @miguelnogueira2719
    @miguelnogueira271911 жыл бұрын

    Can anyone kindly tell me if these buildings are still up? I'd like to visit them some time!

  • @j.sebring6136

    @j.sebring6136

    3 жыл бұрын

    The two I worked in, Duluth, MN and Corvallis, OR are still there. I visited the Corvallis site last year. It's used by several companies. The Duluth building is visible in Google Earth pictures.

  • @DavidGalich77
    @DavidGalich77Ай бұрын

    In all that complicity there was technology. We as humans are resourceful.

  • @jwaustinmunguy
    @jwaustinmunguy12 жыл бұрын

    @RavenRof R/SAOC was updated by General Dynamics in the 1990s. Remember that the computing power needed is not very large and they have been at it for sixty years. I would expect to see this sort of application in a private, secure cloud some day. Distributed, redundant systems with lots of connectivity to weapons like F-22, F-35, AWACS, AEGIS, the White-house X-Box 360, Obama's iPhone. There's an app for that!

  • @cyberyogicowindler2448

    @cyberyogicowindler2448

    Жыл бұрын

    And in future coming generation people will need to defend their houses against attacking microbots and nanobots, so every building may need its own malbot defense as a technical immune system more complex than SAGE with ant-sized defense robots to survive the age before Grey Goo.

  • @Isaac-gh5ku
    @Isaac-gh5ku8 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if the SAGE System has been upgraded to early 21st Century/2010's standard or not?

  • @MrJest2

    @MrJest2

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Isaac Adam Most likely it's been completely replaced by a different system. When I was in the AF in '84, our SAGE director site was used for a lot of other purposes, because it was this huge concrete block to support massive computers that had been by then completely replaced with smaller and more powerful systems. The actual SAGE functions were confined to a single floor; the rest of the building was essentially taken over to be the base HQ offices. Routine electronics updates are commonplace in the Air Force - typical government inefficiency notwithstanding. The base I was at was decommissioned; the director site along with it.

  • @Isaac-gh5ku

    @Isaac-gh5ku

    8 жыл бұрын

    +MrJest2 Thank you for your information.

  • @WarrenPostma

    @WarrenPostma

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Isaac Adam I believe that the US has multiple redundant sets of capabilities in 2016 that far exceed 3x the full capability of SAGE, which as this video description points out was only used until the early 1980s. Parts of the SAGE system influenced the design of the SABRE system which although redesigned several times, is still an active important civilian aerospace technology even today. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabre_(computer_system)

  • @kenschnable428

    @kenschnable428

    4 жыл бұрын

    I worked in the Air Force at the SAGE DC in Topsham, Maine 62-66. If you look at an satellite view now it is all gone.

  • @SpecialEdAllstar
    @SpecialEdAllstar13 жыл бұрын

    @selahia The outright usefulness of this system never had a chance to be proven out as the cold war never went hot. However, the advances in technology this project wrought out have been wildly successful. Often times it takes a large and wealthy nation to innovate in a totally unknown field. In the beginning there was no market for these machines. It took the military to prove just how useful computers could be. What advances in technology has your nation driven forward?

  • @MrBallmer
    @MrBallmer11 жыл бұрын

    Can it run crysis?

  • @Kg277
    @Kg27712 жыл бұрын

    23:02 star-wars-like growl!

  • @ironchef3500
    @ironchef350010 жыл бұрын

    Man, I love this shit

  • @scar9264
    @scar92647 жыл бұрын

    I heard "High speed anime bombers'

  • @Zher0kool
    @Zher0kool13 жыл бұрын

    Interesting.

  • @SoapinTrucker
    @SoapinTrucker4 жыл бұрын

    A good Dell with an an i9 could run all the computing needs of one warship of yesteryear!

  • @andrewbevan4662
    @andrewbevan46625 жыл бұрын

    When did they start to use it for business accounting?

  • @lordcraycray2921

    @lordcraycray2921

    2 жыл бұрын

    I believe that SABRE computer is one of the first offshoots. It is the basis of airline ticket reservation systems.

  • @brecken19972
    @brecken1997211 жыл бұрын

    yeah but does it have direct connection to missiles and other military weapons :3

  • @thomasjordan5483

    @thomasjordan5483

    5 ай бұрын

    Must have because when testing the communications they forgot to have our switch at one site turned to feedback loop and the BOMARC missles rose out of their underground hide outs and our brave airment mostly abandoned the site! Their were 18 hanging on a pickup speeding down the exit road when stopped by an officer comming to inspect thair site! Funny as heck for us in the CC but some real trouble for those hanging onto the pickup truck!

  • @neur0sum
    @neur0sum8 жыл бұрын

    The birth of the internet people. Remember: however cool your cellphone may be, your government has bigger, better, more terrifying stuff. Computers and atomic war, both products of WW2, advanced together.

  • @sardoggy
    @sardoggy8 жыл бұрын

    gv keep posting...

  • @Datan0de
    @Datan0de14 жыл бұрын

    @PObserver It was actually part of NORAD.

  • @jwaustinmunguy
    @jwaustinmunguy12 жыл бұрын

    @SpecialEdAllstar You think that the Soviets never tested this system. They made thousands of 'penetration runs' with manned bombers, most notably the TU-95 Bear. They also deployed their famous fleet of 'fishing boats' around our shores. The best fishing was usually near a NORAD radar station like CFS Holberg on Norhern Vancouver Island. Prime fishing time was during SAC/NORAD joint exercises.

  • @marlls1989
    @marlls198915 жыл бұрын

    Just one redundancy node, in such a crucial system

  • @paulkaie
    @paulkaie12 жыл бұрын

    Yeah? How many missiles does your kickass Netbook control?

  • @evanpapp93
    @evanpapp9314 жыл бұрын

    sage radar was supposed to be this big thing but in reality they had many many problems with sage radar

  • @johnkern7075
    @johnkern7075 Жыл бұрын

    I believe my place of employment uses that computer to process payroll. 😆

  • @sbmrunning
    @sbmrunning15 жыл бұрын

    was this actually built all over the country?

  • @harryohrt5255
    @harryohrt52559 жыл бұрын

    I'm guessing this was originally in color. If so, this film is badly degraded. Surprising, as one would expect quality film stock and storage from the DoD. The detailed descriptions here are not kept secret from the enemy. Interesting attitude towards the perceived enemy. "We know you can't duplicate this. Look on and despair."

  • @fmanh

    @fmanh

    8 жыл бұрын

    the film where likely not for public consumption. likely information intended for the airforce peopem

  • @jmalmsten

    @jmalmsten

    8 жыл бұрын

    this has more a feel of an internal educational film than anything supposed to be viewed by an international public audience. And while scientists and technicians were maybe in the habit of recording their experiments on high quality film stocks to accommodate detailed analysis, these educational reels were most likely considered to have a fairly short life-span. Existing only for a short while during its educational value. Therefore a cheaper medium was likely chosen. Also. What we are watching now is probably a cheap 16mm distribution copy. Not exactly meant to stand the test of time. Even hollywood productions of the era have had problems preserving full color archival prints. Most degrading into single-tone browns. The ones that survive the best are those that got a 3 strip monochrome technicolor separation archival treatment. So on the contrary I am not exactly surprised that this copy is in this poor shape.

  • @marcose.5723

    @marcose.5723

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Harry Ohrt Actually the idea was to make the soviets think that a first attack on the US was unfeasible. So, while I think that this video was training material, there was a certain amount of public advertising about the system, as a deterrent against the soviets having funny ideas. And basically, considering there was not a III World War, it looks like it worked.

  • @stevedunch581

    @stevedunch581

    7 жыл бұрын

    Harry Ohrt the quality of the film is exactly why it's so awesome

  • @tri5ford

    @tri5ford

    7 жыл бұрын

    Harry, The quality of this film is the same as I viewed it in 1965. These were not high buck films. Just used for training and informal information.

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo8 жыл бұрын

    At 1:58 model of BOMARC in background. Canada bought 'em with nuke warheads stored on the American side of the border!

  • @MrBronsonNY
    @MrBronsonNY7 жыл бұрын

    I wonder whats the benchmark

  • @johnholmes8315

    @johnholmes8315

    7 жыл бұрын

    50 Khz per second

  • @Datan0de
    @Datan0de14 жыл бұрын

    @blueblob4 In all likelihood, a solar powered calculator that you can buy in a blister pack at the drug store for $.99 has faster numerical computing power than an AN/FSQ-7. As far as actual capability, it's probably not quite as powerful as a Commodore 64. The computer you're reading this comment on almost certainly has an order of magnitude more computing power than the entire SAGE network combined, and more than every computer on the planet combined when this video was made.

  • @BatusaiJack
    @BatusaiJack11 жыл бұрын

    Master Computer Programs

Келесі