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Tube🍂Time

fascinating to imagine an alternate reality where transistors never worked and people figured out how to miniaturize vacuum tubes, etching arrays of them on metal wafers and building computers. In fact, they could even have built the entire Internet using a series of tubes.

21 comments
Jon Hendry

@tubetime

Are there any tubes with transistors inside?

Tube🍂Time

@jonhendry not that i am aware of. i vaguely recall someone made a tube with passive parts like resistors inside, but no other semiconductors.

Matt

@tubetime @jonhendry I think I have one with a diode inside, at least that's what it looks like, it might be something else entirely.

Matt replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime @jonhendry@hachyderm.io I'm much more inclined to think it's a quartz resonator or filter now. I think the label did once exist but got damaged years ago and is very fragile. The existing hexagonal label reads Q.C.C

Stewart Russell

@tubetime @jonhendry the Korg/Noritake Itron Nutube assemblies might combine the two: korgnutube.com/en

- it's basically using a VFD as an audio amplifier

David Fox 🌻🥸

@tubetime What #AdobeFirefly thinks it would look like. #GenerativeAI

Prompt: long shot of thousands 1 millimeter tall nuvistors lying on huge printed circuit boards.

Glen Akins

@tubetime MEMS before chips! And last I looked, the Internet was a series of tubes.

Joviko Wi

@tubetime

With industry starting to look at analog computing again, the tube might yet make a comeback. They're so good for analog circuits.

Brian Danger Hicks

@tubetime I do remember that year or so when SEDs were going to be the hot new display technology and we were all going to get separate CRTs for all of our subpixels

Rachel Greenham

@tubetime nah, gimme Babbage-Lovelace engines humming away at nano-scale 😀

Winchell Chung ⚛🚀

@tubetime that was actually part of the background of the scifi table top role playing game GURPS Lensman.

SuperIlu

@tubetime I think you just invented a new subgenre of science fiction: Tubepunk.
😁

Trammell Hudson

@tubetime the Vacuum Transistor allows fabrication of chip-scale vacuum tubes on normal CMOS process. These devices switch in the terrahertz range and require neither a heated filament nor a vacuum, since the source-to-drain distance is shorter than the mean free path (which means electrons won't hit any other atoms along the way): spectrum.ieee.org/introducing-

scrottie (he/him/them)

@tubetime Neat! Figured tubes kept the same form factor. Er, up until sweetwater.com/store/detail/VX and korgnutube.com/en , much more recently. And curious for your thoughts on those.

Alistair Young

@tubetime

In my science-fiction universe, I call this technology "electron plumbing".

(While semiconductors did come to be there, electron plumbing still owns the high-power applications.)

Greg Smith

@tubetime perfect for building an Interociter

jack the nonabrasive

@tubetime reminds me of the Robert Symons quote in this piece on cold-cathode traveling wave tubes:
“If the transistor had been invented first, the vacuum tube would have been invented immediately afterwards.”

spectrum.ieee.org/the-quest-fo

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