
Mike and team came to recover the software from the hand-woven rope memory in my Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC), removed from the Lunar Module in the Smithsonian and reused for the first digital fly-by-wire airplane flights. They just released the video.
NASA never saved a copy of the software from the Apollo program. But the magnetic core memories in the computers retain their program. So, Mike Stewart designed and built a rope reader (photo above), and he is using it to read out the programs in the computers that have been saved. Mike doing more Apollo software recovery than all the museums in the world combined.
My TLDR; American won the space race because of superiority in compute from an early bet on the integrated circuit (IC). The Lunar Module guidance computer was the first IC-based computer, and the first contracting award of the Apollo program in 1962. By 1963, Apollo consumed 60% of global IC production. It was essential for real-time trajectory calculations for rendezvous, an essential capability for our lunar mission plans.
My AGC was so rare and valuable that it was reused in the first digital fly-by-wire (DFBW) test flights, as is common on all jets today (instead of a physical connection with cables and pullies, the pilot’s flight controls go to the computer, and the computer controls everything that makes the plane fly). Rather than build a new computer for this, they reused the Lunar Module computer as well as 60% of the Apollo 14 flight software!
My AGC and related components were removed from LM-2 and put into a custom pallet with liquid nitrogen cooling plates so that it could be lowered into an F-8 supersonic jet behind the cockpit, like R2-D2 in an X-wing fighter.
NASA’s pioneering DFBW program was sponsored by Neil Armstrong in 1972. It worked beautifully, giving better control, efficiency and reliability to flight. After this demo, the space shuttle and eventually all jets shifted to this control method. NASA concluded that the DFBW was “one of the most significant and most successful NASA aeronautical programs since the inception of the agency.”
The analysis of my AGC and it memories revealed that it has components that flew to the moon and back on Apollo 12, and it contains Aurora 88, the first Lunar Module rope ever produced, representing the complete LM AGC test set.
Thank you Mike, Marc and Ken for your incredible techno-archaeology and revivalism!

My earlier post on its user in 

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