In the (roughly) two years of my involvement with Traveller, I've heard alot criticism about the Traveller computer paradogm, and I am inclined to agree, for the very least, with a portion of this criticism. The main issue, IMHO, is that of Traveller using a relatively accurate (is it?) model of how computers used to work in the 1960's and 1970's, prior to the info-tech (and personal-computer) revolution of the early 1980's. That is, Traveller usually portrays computers as massive machines that use magnetic tapes for storage and use alot of power to operate. Also, Traveller computers usually have "storage space" and "CPU space", with almost no reference to processing power as something seperate from the amount of available RAM.
My layman's understanding of current computer technology (I am not very knowledgable in this field) leads me to propose the following model for Traveller computers:
The important characteristics of a Traveller computer should be its long-term storage space, its RAM (short-term storage) and its processing power; RAM might be subsumed into processing power if you want. This will lead to a system similar to T4, in which computers have processing-power and tasks (or programs) have complexity, and the comparison of these two values determines the computer's performance with that task. I'd add long-term storage to this, but with modern concepts such as multitasking and virtual memory, RAM seems to me to be another component of processing power in thefinal count. So you could load alot of computer programs at once, but too many will reduce performance (more HD-to-RAM swapping and CPU resource overload).
My layman's understanding of current computer technology (I am not very knowledgable in this field) leads me to propose the following model for Traveller computers:
The important characteristics of a Traveller computer should be its long-term storage space, its RAM (short-term storage) and its processing power; RAM might be subsumed into processing power if you want. This will lead to a system similar to T4, in which computers have processing-power and tasks (or programs) have complexity, and the comparison of these two values determines the computer's performance with that task. I'd add long-term storage to this, but with modern concepts such as multitasking and virtual memory, RAM seems to me to be another component of processing power in thefinal count. So you could load alot of computer programs at once, but too many will reduce performance (more HD-to-RAM swapping and CPU resource overload).