Tampering with the easy targets
Ben Smith, Maxim Integrated
embedded.com (October 05, 2014)
In 1964 International Business Machines (IBM) announced its System/360. It was by no means the first computer, but it was one of the most popular, with thousands delivered between 1965 and 1978. It was considered state of the art when introduced, with medium-range systems sporting 128KB to 512KB of memory and a throughput of about 0.3MIPS.
The system was large—multiple cabinets contained auxiliary storage, communications equipment, and peripheral components—and required specialized power and cooling. These machines were tended by a highly trained cadre of computer operators, and unless you had a good reason to be there, you did not easily gain access to the ‘machine room’. These rooms had the very best security: multiple physical locks and humorless men guarding the door.
These machines managed millions of financial transactions, making them a ripe target for criminals wishing to tap that flow of money. But tampering with these machines was virtually impossible. All transactions were secure because the machines themselves were physically secure behind glass-walled machine rooms.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- NPU IP Core for Mobile
- NPU IP Core for Edge
- Specialized Video Processing NPU IP
- HYPERBUS™ Memory Controller
- AV1 Video Encoder IP
Related White Papers
- Safeguarding the Arm Ecosystem with PSA Certified PUF-based Crypto Coprocessor
- Revolutionizing Consumer Electronics with the power of AI Integration
- Boosting Model Interoperability and Efficiency with the ONNX framework
- Streamlining SoC Integration With the Power of Automation
Latest White Papers
- Ramping Up Open-Source RISC-V Cores: Assessing the Energy Efficiency of Superscalar, Out-of-Order Execution
- Transition Fixes in 3nm Multi-Voltage SoC Design
- CXL Topology-Aware and Expander-Driven Prefetching: Unlocking SSD Performance
- Breaking the Memory Bandwidth Boundary. GDDR7 IP Design Challenges & Solutions
- Automating NoC Design to Tackle Rising SoC Complexity