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In the fall of 1965, Carnegie Institute of Technology decided to install Large Capacity Core Storage (LCS) as the auxiliary storage device on its IBM 360/67 Time-Sharing computer system. The bulk core will be used as a swapping device, replacing the drums of conventional configurations, and as an extension of main core memory. The decision was motivated by an analysis which yielded the following results:
Hugh C. Lauer (Sun,) studied this question.