Visiting a Data Centre in the 1990s

They sure don’t build “Big Iron” computers like they used to. This is a data centre located in Los Angeles in the 1990s.

Note

This article is part of our USA Film Retrospective series, featuring images captured mostly on film on budget cameras in the 1990s and early 2000s. The images have been scanned from film negatives (up to 30 years old) and then post processed to artificially increase sharpness. Please forgive us if they do not meet your expectations of photographic quality.

Mainframe computers used to be referred to as “Big Iron” because they were big, took up lots of space, and require a special facility to house and operate them. Mainframes used to be a single computer separated into different components, each in a container or rack of it’s own. The central processing unit, disk drives, tape drives, etc.

In the 1990s, as computers became smaller and smaller due to advances in integrated circuit design and manufacturing, Big Iron became more associated with any computer system that was large, and typically these computer systems contain not just one central processing unit, but many microprocessors working together.

I visited a data centre in the 1990s and was allowed to take some pictures with my compact camera. An expert in these systems have identified the machine as a Teradata 3600 with Application Module Processors and hot swappable Customer Replaceable Unit disks. Me? I was just content to watch the blinking lights and scrolling text on displays.

As an indication of how far computing has advanced, a Raspberry Pi 4 (or perhaps several of them to replicate the architecture) would probably have more computing speed these days (though probably not the I/O throughput).

For privacy reasons I am not going to reveal the location of this data centre, so I am marking the location as Los Angeles airport (LAX).

Related Articles in this Series

Series: USA Film Retrospective

Series: USA Film Retrospective

Chris ThamJul 1, 20211 min read
This is a series of articles featuring photographs mainly taken in 1990s using a variety of film cameras, ranging from compact cameras such as the Canon Sure Shot to SLRs such as the Pentax PZ-70.
Star Trek Adventure

Star Trek Adventure

Chris ThamJul 3, 20211 min read
Beam aboard the bridge of the Starship ENTERPRISE. Your mission? To explore the limits of your imagination with Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock. To battle Klingons, space creatures and alien superbeings! To boldly go where no man has gone before.
Universal Studios Hollywood

Universal Studios Hollywood

Chris ThamJul 5, 20211 min read
Universal Studios Hollywood is a unique theme park in the 1990s in that it was based on a real film studio backlot, and the Backlot Studio Tour actually started in 1915.
Long Beach and Queen Mary

Long Beach and Queen Mary

Chris ThamJul 9, 20211 min read
On my first visit to the Los Angeles in 1993 (business trip), we used to drive along the coast on the weekends. One weekend we stopped by at Long Beach to visit Queen Mary.
Sherman Oaks Galleria

Sherman Oaks Galleria

Chris ThamJul 11, 20211 min read
We visited this iconic shopping mall, one of the birthplaces of “Valley” culture and used in several films, several months before it was severely damaged by the Northridge earthquake and it’s eventual decline.

Posted by Chris Tham

Chris Tham is a co-founder of Visual Voyager Pty Ltd, the Principal Voigtländer Ambassador for Mainline Photographics and a Workshop Instructor for Mainline Photo Academy. She brings over 35 years of experience as a photographer to her role, starting with a Yashica rangefinder belonging to her dad, joining the Photography Club in school, and developing her own photos. More recently, Chris has been taking photos during her travels, and as a result has experienced some of the most interesting places in the world. Chris focuses on nature, street, and urban architecture subjects in her photography.