Core Memory
Jim Thompson wrote:
On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 00:27:03 -0500, flipper wrote:
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 23:39:48 -0500, Dan wrote:
flipper wrote:
snip
I really liked the PDP-11 and have one of the 'micro' versions.
John
I really liked the HP 2114A. The teletype I could do without now, but
I was used to it from timeshare days. The system we used had a tower
with a desk on the left for the TTY. The tower included and optical tape
reader, optical card reader which used cards one marked with a pencil,
the 2114A and a storage drawer with a hand held rewinder for longer
tapes. I can find pictures of the 2114A, but not the entire system.
I took a tour of Digital's Maynard facility and was impressed with
the PDP-12. Having used the PDP-8S, where the S stood for SLOW,
LOL. Yes, it's 1 bit serial ALU was deadly slow but it was also a lot
cheaper at $10k vs $25k for the 'fast' fellah.
In one of my EE courses we designed some interfaces for the PDP-8,
which was very simple to do so we spend most of the time playing
spacewar on it. hehe
That's the way to play a 'computer game', boy. Down in the bowels of a
computer lab with scopes, racks, and hardware scattered about so it
looks like you're doing something 'technical'.
the
PDP-12 with a CRT seemed wonderful.
A bit quirky, though. I'll take a PDP-11 any day.
Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
I typed my MIT Bachelor's Thesis onto paper tape, using the
flexowriter input to a PDP-8. I think I still have the paper tape
around here somewhere... 48 years later ;-)
(Fellow classmate and PDP-8 hacker Alan Kotok (later a significant
digital architect at DEC, deceased May 26, 2006) and I were good
buddies and members of the model railroad club :-)
...Jim Thompson
Computers and model trains? Egad, not live steam, I hope.
Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
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