I have one of the old Fidelity chess challenger dedicated chess game boards from back in the 1970s.
My question is regarding how this thing manages to hold onto/retain its programming.
I have had this thing for about 40 years now (was a birthday gift from my brother) and for long periods of time (some as long as 10 years) the thing would not ever even be plugged in and used. However, whenever during the 40 years that I occasionally get around to dragging it out and plugging it in, it always works/plays chess just fine.
So how does this thing manage to hold onto its programming after such long periods of complete inactivity ?
I would think if it had something like a modern PC CMOS battery, it would have long since gone south.
Is the programming/logic of this thing pretty much good for an indefinite period of time as long as the structure of the game board is intact ?
More info supplied if needed.
Thanks.
My question is regarding how this thing manages to hold onto/retain its programming.
I have had this thing for about 40 years now (was a birthday gift from my brother) and for long periods of time (some as long as 10 years) the thing would not ever even be plugged in and used. However, whenever during the 40 years that I occasionally get around to dragging it out and plugging it in, it always works/plays chess just fine.
So how does this thing manage to hold onto its programming after such long periods of complete inactivity ?
I would think if it had something like a modern PC CMOS battery, it would have long since gone south.
Is the programming/logic of this thing pretty much good for an indefinite period of time as long as the structure of the game board is intact ?
More info supplied if needed.
Thanks.
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