During the 1980s, Dynamic Random-Access Memory (DRAM) and Random-Access Memory (RAM) microchips offered the largest storage capacity and granted users easier access to the information they stored. While many computer chips found everyday uses—such as the Intel 386, which went on to run Microsoft’s iconic Windows 95 operating system—the majority on display here played an important role in the United States’ far-reaching Cold War activities. They were used to control the engines of military aircraft, maneuver satellites, map computation for military tanks, and filter radar systems employed by the US Navy.
2023
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