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@Lurker17

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[–] 1 pt

May '66, I was still in 1st grade! Lol!

Looks like a UV light cabled to the top of the test fixture so can erase the EEPROM under test as needed.

Not sure if the box with 8 analog displays is a stack of power supplies or what. No oscilloscopes in view, so more likelihood he's working with an EEPROM here vs analog device. The stack under the DUT provides all the wiring, relays, interconnects to the device fixture. Not sure why the clear tube over the DUT unless they also used that setup for temperature testing ... or it was a sure way to keep the window on the EEPROM an exact distance from the UV source.

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Did EPROMs exist in 66?

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Good point. I pulled this from wiki - note NEC appears to be an EEPROM leader at the time ... so your desk right be part of the early development effort to create EEPROMs.

History In the early 1970s, some companies and organizations began to develop EEPROM. In 1972, the EEPROM device was successfully manufactured In 1975, NEC’s semiconductor operations unit and later NEC Electronics (now Renesas Electronics) granted the tradename EEPROM® to the Japan Patent Office. In 1978, the trademark right was granted and registered as No. 1,342,184 in Japan, which was still valid until March 2018. In February 1977, Eliyahou Harari of Hughes Aircraft Company invented a new EEPROM technology, which uses the Fowler-Nordheim tunneling technology, passing through a thin layer of silicon dioxide between the floating gate and the wafer. Hughes continued to produce this new EEPROM device. But the patent cited NEC's EEPROM® From 1976 to around 1978, the Intel’s team including George Perlegos made some inventions to enhance this tunneling EEPROM technology. In 1978, the Intel’s team developed a 16K (2K word × 8) bit Intel 2816 device with a thin silicon dioxide layer of less than 200Å. In 1980, this structure was publicly introduced in the form of FLOTOX; floating gate tunnel oxide. The FLOTOX structure improved the reliability of the erase/write cycle per byte up to 10,000 times.

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Interesting. There are some slides with microscope shots of circuity in there, I'll see if there's anything of note.

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This must be their old EMDL labs