T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
90.1 | earily 70's offering | WORDS::BADGER | | Fri Mar 14 1986 12:37 | 18 |
|
I can add my 2cents about the early 70s era at DEC.
o Training was held in building 11. free coffee and donuts!
o used to have a 1 weeks class on ASR33 repair. you had to
take one apart and put it back together to pass.
o A lot of rumors at that time from peple who *said* that they
threw computers, modules, and tool boxes out the door.
o later had an office on 3-5. the floor was so uneven, you had
to position your desk so that you would roll into it and not away!
is there still access to all those tunels? I can't remember where
they are all located, but it used to break up a boring day.
Newcomers having to navigate from one fire exit number to another,
is there a map now?
And will VMS ever be as good as tops-10 or TOPS-20? How could
a company go backwards in its software offerings?
ed badger
|
90.2 | gawd, the rumors still fly | SOFCAD::KNIGHT | Dave Knight | Fri Mar 14 1986 12:42 | 13 |
| Tool boxes in the mill pond, definitely.
Machines? Maybe. One of the real dog (to repair) machines on the
first floor of building 1 did disappear late one night in 1970.
Did it go in the mill pond?
They drained the millpond once while I was in Maynard to repair
some of the gates and there was a lot of mud covered "somethings"
laying within throwing (heaving?) distance of the buildings.
I'd still like to know what happened to "Popsicle Mary", a PDP-8
that was so poor that it wouldn't run without tons of popsicle
sticks jammed between the modules to keep them tight.
|
90.3 | Pond depth | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Sat Mar 15 1986 00:09 | 8 |
| One night, some folks were debating the depth of the mill pond.
So Richie, I think it was, took a DECtape and unrolled it out his
MLO5-5 (oops it was ML5-5 back then) window and measured the distance
to the water. Then again, measuring the distance to the bottom.
The difference, was presumed to be the depth.
Of course, DECtape being the reliable medium that it was, the tape
was then put back in service the data used!
|
90.4 | History answers | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Sat Mar 15 1986 01:24 | 84 |
| >> Are there really old prototypes swimming around in the Mill pond?
Don't know on this one.
>> Why did the PDP-6 use 36 bits?
(Taken from Computer Engineering, a DEC View of Hardware Systems
Design, by C. Gordon Bell, J. Craig Mudge, and John E. McNamara,
Digital Press, 1978.)
Initially, the PDP-6 was designed to extend DEC's line of 18-bit
computers. (The PDP-5 was designed at the same time--it was the
predecessor of the PDP-8 and hence a 12-bit computer.) "Earlier
DEC designs and the then-current six-bit character standard forced
a word length that was a multiple of 6, 12, and 18 bits. Thus, a
36-bit word was selected." (p. 492)
>> Which operating systems were written by DEC, and which came from
>> outside?
(I won't try to remember the dozen early -11 systems or all the
-8 systems.)
PDP-8: OS/8, TSS/8 were written by DEC.
PDP-10: TOPS-10 written by DEC. TENEX written by BBN. TOPS-20 evolved
from TENEX by DEC.
PDP-11: PTS, DOS-11, RT-11, RSTS, RSX-11A, RSX-11B, RSX-11C, MUMPS-11,
RSX-11D, RSX-11M, IAS, RSTS/E, RSX-11M-PLUS, P/OS, Micro/RSX,
Micro/RSTS, MicroPower/Pascal all written by DEC. UNIX and TSX-PLUS
written outside. (Actually, RSTS was written by outsiders on contract
to DEC.)
VAX: VMS, VAX/ELN written by DEC. UNIX written by Bell Labs.
PC: CP/M, MS-DOS written outside.
>> How did the PDP-8 come about?
(ibid)
"After visiting Chalk River in the winter of 1962, DEC engineers
decided that a 12-bit design based on the DC-12 would be excellent
for such a front end in PDP-4 process control applications. The
instruction set for the new machine was specified in detail by Alan
Kotok and Gordon Bell, and the logic design was carried out by Edson
DeCastro...."
>> How did the PDP-11 become so popular?
I am sure there are many views. So I will quote again:
"The PDP-11 has evolved quite differently from the other computers
discussed in this book and, as a result, provides an independent
and interesting story. Like the other computers, the factors that
have created the various PDP-11 machines have been market and
technology based, but they have generated a large number of
implementations (ten) over a relatively short ([its first] eight-year)
lifetime. ...there are multiple implementations spanning a performance
range at the same time.... The PDP-11 designs cover a range of 500:1
in system price ($500 to $250,000) and 500:1 in memory size....
>> Anyone know anything about the 11/780 development project?
Yes. The project came from a business task force in Feb 1975 to
evaluate growing the -10 down vs the -11 up. Members: Peter Conklin,
Bruce Delagi, Robin Frith, Larry Wade. An initial architecture team
was called together on April 1, 1975, (truly!) "to investigate a
minor extension to the PDP-11 to run larger programs." The team
was called VAXA; initial members: Gordon Bell, Tom Hastings, Richie
Lary, Dave Rodgers, Steve Rothman, Bill Strecker. The 780 project was
initiated at the end of June, 1975. It shipped December, 1977.
>> Who wrote the VAX architecture?
In addition to the VAXA members above, major contributers were also
Ron Brender, Peter Conklin, Dave Cutler, Rich Grove, Dick Hustvedt,
Marty Jack, Jud Leonard, Peter Lipman, Mary Payne,
Bob Stewart.
>> Who spec'ed out VMS?
In addition to the above people Patti Anklam, Bill Brown, Scott Davis,
Lois Frampton, Sue Gault, Andy Goldstein, Roger Heinen, Herb Jacobs,
Leo Laverdure, Hank Levy, Carol Peters, Trev Porter
|
90.5 | EG&H did BASIC-PLUS | STAR::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Sun Mar 16 1986 15:12 | 9 |
| < Note 90.4 by HUMAN::CONKLIN "Peter Conklin" >
> (Actually, RSTS was written by outsiders on contract to DEC.)
If you're thinking of EG&H, they only did BASIC-PLUS (which was
sort of synonymous with RSTS in those days) but the operating system
was done in-house.
--Simon
|
90.6 | | IMGAWN::SCHMIDT | Atlant G. Schmidt | Mon Mar 17 1986 14:32 | 13 |
| Speculation--
I didn't think that DEC did TSS-8 (Time Sharing System-8).
I also thought that TSS-8 grew into Rsts Version <4A.
Simon, You'd know better than I but I thought Rsts was an
outside product until Version 4A.
Mumps was originally designed at MGH (Massachusetts
General Hospital). What was the original host hardware?
When did it become a Digital product?
Atlant
|
90.7 | I don't know who did TSS-8, but | MILOS::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Mon Mar 17 1986 23:11 | 15 |
| Mark Bramhall confirms my previous reply:
EG&H did (the first version of) BASIC-PLUS.
RSTS was done totally in-house. Originally, by Nathan Teicholtz and
someone else I cannot remember. And, yes, I was there starting in
RSTS V2A-19...
re TSS-8:
Yes, RSTS is culturally in the same family tree as TSS-8, DECSYSTEM-10,
and even (remotely) MIT's CTSS (which didn't run on a DEC machine).
But RSTS didn't inherit any code from TSS-8.
--Simon
|
90.8 | And lots more operating systems. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Tue Mar 18 1986 04:05 | 21 |
| And you have missed RTS-8 (done by Richie Lary, reputedly in
a spare weekend). That is a multi-tasking, priority scheduling system,
similar to RSX.
And CAPS-8 and CAPS-11. I am not too sure who wrote them, but
CAPS-8 was written to take advantage of the new advanced features
of the VT05, so it was almost certainly written in-house.
And further back, there was the 4k Disk Monitor system for the
PDP-8. As a customer I modified that to run on TD8-E DECtapes as
the system device. The command language was closely modeled on the
PDP-6 operating system, so that was probably in-house too.
We have had a mention of OS/8, but of course that was really
just PS/8 with code in it to detect a PDP-8 look-alike and crash.
(Incidentally, there was a bug in that bit of code, which I SPRed.
After clearing the bootstrap blocks on your system disks, it failed
to correctly clear memory. I am not sure if the bug was ever fixed
:-)).
Dave
|
90.9 | GLC-8 ?, FOCAL ? | YIPPEE::BREICHNER | | Tue Mar 18 1986 04:22 | 8 |
| Does anyone remember GLC-8 ? A Gaschromatograph turnkey application.
Was it ever successfull ? I used to service a customer who after
a painful startup-phase finished to like it quite much. I believe
that he is still using it.
Did DEC write this software ?
And how about FOCAL ? Is it DEC's ? What made it loose versus BASIC
Fred
|
90.10 | Yes to GLC-8 | GRDIAN::BROOMHEAD | Ann A. Broomhead | Tue Mar 18 1986 10:34 | 5 |
| The first project I worked on at DEC was GLC-8/II. (GLC stood
for Gas and Liquid Chromatography.) I believe it had only one
big customer, but I never really learned how well it did.
-- Ann
|
90.11 | | SOFCAD::KNIGHT | Dave Knight | Tue Mar 18 1986 11:20 | 6 |
| FOCAL was designed and built in DEC by Rick Merrill. Rick is still
around the mill somewhere. For a while we pushed it as our in-house
developed alternative to BASIC for the 8.
TSS-8 was (mostly) done by George Berry (who now is somewhere in
CXO).
|
90.12 | re .-1 | BUNYIP::QUODLING | It works for me.... | Tue Mar 18 1986 21:25 | 3 |
| Rick Merrill of Focal Fame, is now a Product Manager for the
LN03.
|
90.13 | | RANI::LEICHTERJ | Jerry Leichter | Wed Mar 19 1986 08:47 | 7 |
| Martin Minow did an implementation of FOCAL in C. Since it runs under DECUS C
(11's with all current OS's except MUMPS) and VAX C, FOCAL should easily win the
contest for "language implemented on the widest variety of DEC processors".
I'm pretty sure that the original MUMPS ran on an 11. It's been a DEC product
for at least 8 years, probably longer.
-- Jerry
|
90.14 | Boycott BASIC now !! | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Wed Mar 19 1986 09:54 | 26 |
| I did an implementation of FOCAL in MACRO-32. It was submitted
to DECUS in August 1978, and had to be given a PDP-11 number, since
they did not have a category for VAX programmes then. It was later
renumbered as VAX-1. The latest version has a number of modules
in BLISS.
FOCAL was originally written for the PDP-5, and the earliest
version that I used still had hooks in so that it would run on the
PDP-5 as well as the PDP-8. It lost out against BASIC because it
was designed and pushed by this tiny startup computer company that
no-one had heard of, while BASIC was designed and pushed by this
large, influential educational establishment.
There are implementations of FOCAL for almost every operating
system that DEC has ever produced. I have seen it on DOS-11, DOS-15
and IAS, just to quote examples. At one time it was the only high
level language that had good RT-11 GT graphics support built in.
I think the original MUMPS was written by a Massachussets hospital
for the PDP-15. I used the PDP-11 DEC product 10 years ago, but
I am not sure when DEC first took it in house. Since the early
versions could have been considered as not much more than FOCAL
with added support for string indexes and virtual memory, maybe
we could claim it had never really been out of house?
Dave
|
90.15 | | REX::GLEESON | Sue Gleeson | Wed Mar 19 1986 12:53 | 4 |
| Rick Merrill is NOT the Product Manager for the LN03!!! Rick mainly
works with fonts and software applications w/the LN03.
|
90.16 | MUMPS began on Brand X? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Fred @226-7388 | Wed Mar 19 1986 13:27 | 5 |
| I believe MUMPS began at Mass. General Hospital (MGH Utility (?)
Multi Programming System). I first read about it in the early
'70s in, if I recall, a blurb from (low rumble in background)
Data General. It was on a Nova. Maybe they also had it on a DEC
machine too.
|
90.17 | Prog. Lang. TECO | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed Mar 19 1986 16:49 | 4 |
| I claim that TECO is the most widely-implemented programming
language on DEC machines. In addition to the machines quoted
for FOCAL, it was on the PDP-1.
John Sauter
|
90.18 | MUMPS history | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Wed Mar 19 1986 21:15 | 2 |
| MUMPS was first implemented on a PDP-1 by BBN for MGH, as I recall.
I saw it running in the mid 60s.
|
90.19 | The first VAX language was.... | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Wed Mar 19 1986 21:16 | 2 |
| FOCAL was the first language other than assembler actually running
on the VAX. As I recall, it beat FORTRAN by a couple of days.
|
90.20 | Make that two.. | ODIXIE::COLE | Jackson T. Cole | Fri Mar 21 1986 10:32 | 5 |
| < Note 90.17 by DSSDEV::SAUTER "John Sauter" >
-< Prog. Lang. TECO >-
TECO wins in TWO categories then, Language AND Editor!
|
90.21 | more on 36 bits... | CRATE::COBB | Danny Cobb, LAS Eng., LKG | Fri Mar 21 1986 13:05 | 8 |
| Re: PDP-6 word length...
To approximate an Alan Kotok quote:
"Well, we wanted to do LISP, and storing two addresses in a
single machine word would benefit a LISP implamentation.
Since 18 bits of address was more than ANYONE would ever need..."
Danny
|
90.22 | Focal et al. | PEN::KALLIS | | Fri Mar 21 1986 13:34 | 20 |
| re .9:
FOCAL lost out to BASIC (in Digital) for interesting reasons. One
of the chief of them was the then startup PDP-11 product line didn't
want it (originally) and opted for BASIC instead. Rick Merrill
had written a PDP-11 version that performed spectacularly, but nobody
was interested during the early period.
Re the GLC-8:
Originally, it was the CasChrom-8, but we were hit with a Cease
& Desist order by some company who already had a trademark
"Gas-Chrome," or some such, that was just too close.
The original software was developed outside Digital under contract,
as I recall, but it had problems. Gary Cole (now gone from Digital)
did some of the first fixes on that package.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
90.23 | marketing the PDP-11 | CURIE::DIMAN | | Fri Mar 21 1986 18:04 | 31 |
| Re: Early Success of the PDP-ll
There are several reasons why the PDP-11 did so well, but one of
them was some good marketing. There were lots of charts - in
all the literature and sales aids (such as flip charts, and slide
presentations) showing the UNIBUS with all the system components
hanging of it:
<--------------------------------------->
| | | | |
CPU MEM. DISK TERM. PERIF. ETC.
This simple architectural concept was the starting point for
all presentations and lead to messages like: ease of
interfacing, ease of expansion, peripheral device registers
simply locations in memory, etc., etc.
It slaughtered the competition - they just couldn't prove
in simple terms that their architectures were better or provided
other benefits.
Some competitors tried to claim that the Unibus was a bottleneck,
but the simplicity of the charts, and presentations, and messages,
was overwhelming successful in sales situations.
dd
CPU
|
90.24 | More Focal History | REX::MINOW | Martin Minow, DECtalk Engineering | Fri Mar 21 1986 18:17 | 12 |
| Dave Conroy wrote a version of Focal in C -- I had nothing to do with
it.
Focal appears to me to be a descendent of JOSS (Jule's [Schwartz] Own
Software System) that was developed in the fairly early 1960's. They
seem to have many of the same quirks (such as Do a statment or
paragraph, for example).
I would suspect that Fortran and Cobol predate Teco/Focal and both
are certainly more widespread.
Martin.
|
90.25 | Further FOCAL background... | PEN::KALLIS | | Mon Mar 24 1986 10:37 | 8 |
| re .24, et al.:
When I forst saw a FOCAL demo, it was called "FORGE," and was being
run on a PDP-8/S. It was wonderful! You'd input a problem, then
go to lunch while it chugged its way through the 8/S....
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
90.26 | PDP-13 ??? | YIPPEE::BREICHNER | | Tue Mar 25 1986 05:23 | 7 |
| We have had PDP's ranging from -1 to -16. I have never seen any
reference to a PDP-13. Is superstition present even at DEC ?
Will the PDP-16 remain forever the last numbered PDP ?
Fred_who_loved_the_PDP-15
|
90.27 | PDP-13 Rumor | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Mar 25 1986 08:28 | 5 |
| I have heard it said that the PDP-13 developers left Digital and
produced the machine at another company. The other company couldn't
call it the PDP-13, so that name was never used. When the machine
was released it was called the Nova, or something like that.
John Sauter
|
90.28 | The real story of the birth of MUMPS | OZONE::CRAIG | MUMPS is not a disease! | Tue Mar 25 1986 16:22 | 29 |
|
I'm relaying this message from Jack Bowie (Engineering Manager of MSG),
who was at MGH when MUMPS was originally developed.
Bah Humbug to you all. MUMPS was developed at MGH Laboratory of
Computer Science (not to be confused with the Laboratory for Computer
Science (MIT)), or was it the other way around??. Anyway the first
implementation in the mid-60's was on a PDP-7. It was rapidly migrated
to the PDP-9. DEC picked it up in the late 60's and put it on the
PDP-15. This was the first Digital MUMPS product. Next came MUMPS-11
developed in conjunction with Meditech in Cambridge. In the mid-70's
following the standardization effort, we brought out the first version
of DSM (Digital Standard MUMPS). This was DSM-11. Then in the early
80's we developed VAX-DSM. It could have been ported to a PDP-1 at BBN
but I am not aware of that implementation. I do not believe there has
ever been a PDP-8 version, although there was a very early attempt at a
layered product on the 10.
(The 10 version was not a Digital effort needless to say)
Jack
So now you all have the straight scoop on how/when MUMPS came about.
(BTW, this year is the 20th anniversary of MUMPS.)
Bob
|
90.29 | The Nova happened here first | ALIEN::BEZEREDI | Paul Bezeredi | Wed Mar 26 1986 08:43 | 17 |
| re: < Note 90.27 by DSSDEV::SAUTER "John Sauter" >
As I recall (and that takes a lot of recalling) when I joined DEC in February
1968, that project was called the PDP-X. It and its engineers eventually
went on to become DG. One of the reasons I heard was that DeCastro wanted
to make the system out of quad and hex boards. The powers to be at that time
said no.
Another thing I heard was that the machine was designed for the specific
purpose of never getting it past the Engineering Committee (or what
ever it was called back then). The engineers (DeCastro, Sogge, Burkhardt)
wanted to go to form another company but needed a product so they developed
it here fully intending to go somewhere else and build/sell it.
Maybe there is someone still around who can fill us in on what really
happened.
|
90.30 | Uh-Huh | PEN::KALLIS | | Wed Mar 26 1986 14:44 | 14 |
| re .29:
I was here just _after_ the events. My only regret is that Digital
didn't make deCastro, te al. live up to their employee's agreement;
since what became the Nova was developed here, it was a pity they
were able to take it with them.
re .26:
The VAX-11/780 was originally slated to be called the "PDP-11/770"; It
_might_ have become the PDP-770, but wiser heads prevailed.
Steve kallis, Jr.
|
90.31 | How the VAX numbers happened | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Thu Mar 27 1986 00:04 | 52 |
| re .30:
Actually, when we went to name the VAX, the sequence at Operations
Committee was:
We knew that it had to be a PDP, because everyone knew Ken wanted
all systems called PDPs. We wanted to emphasize the -11ness of the
product. It was much more than the 11/70--at that time the top of
the -11 line.
So we proposed PDP-11/170. But Andy Knowles had reserved the 100s
for a very secret project. Turned out to be the PDT!
So we proposed PDP-11/270. But Andy's reservation included planning
ahead for the future. (Incidently, DECmate is a 278, but...)
We purposely skipped the 300s because they were already used for
DATAsystems. We didn't bother explaining that.
Operations Committee therefore decided to call the product the
PDP-11/470. It took us several weeks to convince them that the 470
name was already widely known in the industry!
Since the 500s were in use by the DATAsystem family, we decided
to learn something from Andy's taking out a series plus room to
grow.
We had fond dreams of the VAX family growing down and up. So we
"reserved" 600s, 700s, and 800s. We therefore proposed and got approval
to call the product the PDP-11/770.
Then an expert on names and promotion asked why use PDP. We said
because Ken wanted it. Ken said "who, me?" And the expert said,
a much better choice would be pronounceable and have the letter
X because short words with X stand out. We had such a name in the
project, VAX. So the decision was VAX-11/770.
When the final logo was done by an artist, it looked like
VAX-11
770
and was fine, until we noticed that the 1 slanted down and ran into
the left end of the 7's top. (I can't draw it here, sorry.) But
Bernie LaCroute, being French, noticed that two of these next to
each other were exactly the lapel sign of the Nazi SS troupers.
He decided this was very error prone and would be bad promotion.
So we changed to VAX-11/780.
Eight years later, we introduced the 610 and 630 processors (MicroVAX).
And the 8000 series, which is just the 800s with an extra zero thrown
in for emphasis. So the reservation plan actually worked!
|
90.32 | wasn't it PDP-11/570 for a while? | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Thu Mar 27 1986 04:41 | 4 |
| The 500 series must have been considered for a bit longer than
.31 implies, because I still have a draft copy of the RMS-500 manual.
Dave
|
90.33 | X | SOFCAD::KNIGHT | Dave Knight | Thu Mar 27 1986 07:18 | 6 |
| The DeCastro machine was indeed the PDP-X. The PDP-13 was skipped
for the usual hokey reasons.
The PDP-X was similar in design to the NOVA, but not the same.
DeCastro wouldn't have been that dumb to give us a legal grip on
him.
|
90.34 | Why no lawsuit | NOVA::BERENSON | Hal Berenson | Thu Mar 27 1986 08:34 | 9 |
| Either my mind is going or I remember a talk by KO some number of years
ago in which he indicated they did not take legal action against DG at
the request of one of the people who originally went to start DG but
then blew the whistle on them. The story I remember is that this
person came and told KO the exact story of what DeCastro was up to
because his lawyer had warned him it was illegal, but expressed great
fear at what would happen (to him) if Digital went after DeCastro. KO
decided it wasn't worth the law suit. Sounded like a movie script to
me, but that's the way I heard it.
|
90.35 | Sticking To Digital History | PEN::KALLIS | | Thu Mar 27 1986 11:19 | 8 |
| Re .33, .34:
There's a raft of stories involving deCastro & associates that old
timers could possibly tell, but for the sake of avoiding contentions,
it's probably better that these are left unsaid.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
90.36 | VAX | SQUAM::WELLS | Phil Wells | Thu Mar 27 1986 11:54 | 8 |
| RE: .31
. We had such a name in the
. project, VAX. So the decision was VAX-11/770.
What was the origination of the name VAX ?
-phil
|
90.37 | I think... | SPIDER::KEANE | Brian Keane | Thu Mar 27 1986 13:59 | 7 |
|
Vitrual
Address
Extended (or Extension)
Brian
|
90.38 | BTSS | STAR::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Wed Apr 02 1986 09:57 | 9 |
| (footnote to .7:)
RSTS was first called BTSS. Dave Knight and (the person whose name
Dave nor Mark Bramhall could remember) first worked on BTSS before
it was renamed RSTS and before Nate Teicholtz joined the project.
('BTSS' stood for BASIC Timesharing System, I think.)
--Simon
|
90.39 | RISTUS | CURIE::DIMAN | | Wed Apr 02 1986 19:16 | 10 |
| I remember spending an hour or so with Julius Marcus (PDP-11 Marketing
Manager at the time) trying to come up with a catchy name that
conveyed the idea of a combined time-sharing and resource-sharing
system as opposed to a plain old disk operating system. We just
couldn't latch on to anything good, so he finally said "Well, I'll
settle it now, it will be Resource Sharing - Time Sharing System
(RSTS). Little did we realize that this name would catch on
quite easily and be pronounced as "RISTUS".
dd
|
90.40 | VAX | BISTRO::LIRON | roger liron @VBO | Fri Apr 04 1986 09:24 | 8 |
| re .37
I'v heard many times that VAX stands for:
Virtual Array Extension
|
90.41 | | ULTRA::PRIBORSKY | Tony Priborsky | Fri Apr 04 1986 11:58 | 1 |
| Re: .40: Nope, it's Virtual Address Extension.
|
90.42 | VAX = VAX | CSSE32::PHILPOTT | The Colonel - [WRU #338] | Fri Apr 04 1986 20:49 | 13 |
| "what does VAX stand for" is beginning to sound like "what does LASER
stand for".
What it originally stood for is less important than what it is now
assumed to stand for.
/. Ian .\
PS LASER originally stood for "Light Amplification by Stimulated
Emission Resonance", but the "R" is now assumed to stand for "Radiation"
|
90.44 | Another origin falsely documented by historians.... | MENTOR::REG | | Fri Apr 11 1986 12:18 | 17 |
|
Well, in England they refer to vacuum tubes as "valves".
It is generally assumed that this came about as a way of describing the
fact that they can be turned on and off (athough we don't regard then
now as current devices). What (documented) history has neglected
is the fact that the first commercial manufacturer in Europe was
a french company by the name of V.A. l'vie. In the same way that
"Honda" has become the generic name for small motorcycle (and later
LARGE motorcycle) their company name was adopted by the folks across
the channel (who contracted the pronunciation to "valve") to describe
ALL vacuum tube devices.
Reg
(History gets itself confused TOO often)
|
90.45 | Acronyms | RANI::LEICHTERJ | Jerry Leichter | Sat Apr 19 1986 12:19 | 17 |
| Way back when, there was VAX (Virtual Address[ing?] Extension, in contrast to
PAX (Physical A X). The two acronyms refered to different approaches to dealing
with the PDP-11's 16-bit address limitation. PAX referred to the use of 22-bit
physical addresses (on the "Q-Prime" bus - the original 18-bit Q-bus is now gone
and mainly forgotten, except by people who have the pain of supporting old
18-bit-address only peripherals, like the RX01, on 22-bit machines) and the PMI
on Unibus machines like the 11/70. Of course, "VAX" ended up implying a lot
more "physical" extension than PAX ever did!
re: LASER: LASER is a "secondary acronym". The original device was the MASER,
Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. MASER's pre-date
LASER's by several years. When the first "LASER's" were built, they were often
referred to by the nonsensical appelation "optical MASER". Now, LASER's are
so much more visible thatn MASER's occaissionally get called "microwave LASER's"
and of course we have the proposed "X-ray LASER's" as part of SDI.
-- Jerry
|
90.46 | MASER = ? | CSSE32::PHILPOTT | The Colonel - [WRU #338] | Tue Apr 22 1986 11:53 | 7 |
| aside: what MASER stands for.
The early research papers defined MASER as Microwave Amplification
by Stimulated Emission Resonance, which is more accurate than the
tautological, but commonly stated definition.
/. Ian .\
|
90.47 | Early PDP-8 and RSTS | COOKIE::GWB | | Thu May 01 1986 23:45 | 30 |
| TSS-8 was originally written by Don Witcraft (sp), and then made to work by
Nat Teicholtz after Witcraft left DEC. Mark Bramhall was also one of major
contributors to TSS-8.
Nat Teicholtz later went on to do RSTS, which was originally called BSTS or BTSS
(I can recall which) until that name was discovered to already be a trademark.
Jeff Scott, long since departed, was the other DEC guy on the original RSTS
team. If I recall correctly, Jeff was responsible for parts of the Basic-Plus
runtime. EG&H did the compiler and the rest of the runtime code.
EG&H were hard up for work back in those days, and bid something like $12k for
the contract as a "loss leader", I guess.
The various EDUsystems for the PDP-8 were omitted from the list. There was
EDUsystem-10 (single user BASIC), -20 (a batch BASIC using OCR cards) and
-30 (TSS-8 BASIC), I think.
As has been related elsewhere, PS-8 was designated by Richie the "First Upward
Compatible Keyboard Monitor" to denote it's similarity to the PDP-10. The
acronym FUCKM survived in some of the program listings until someone told
the SDC about it.
Then there was INDAC-8 and TYPESET-8, both developed at DEC.
And others, I'm sure, that I've forgotten.
Regards,
George
|
90.48 | PDP-11/74 ? | SMURF::FUJIURA | Ichiri Fujiura in Merrimack | Fri May 02 1986 01:08 | 7 |
| Can Anyone tell me story of PDP-11/74 ? Which OS is running on ?
BTW,
(OFFICIAL) VAX ARCHITECTURE HANDBOOK says, "The Letter VAX suggest the premier
future of VAX computers -- Virtual Address eXtension"
} if
|
90.49 | Not gone yet. | POTARU::QUODLING | It works for me.... | Fri May 02 1986 06:28 | 5 |
| I think there was a discussion of 74's and RSX in the RSX notes-11
notesfile. RSX Developement still has a 74 at ZK Castor/Pollux::
q
|
90.50 | Lots of EduSystems | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Fri May 02 1986 11:31 | 22 |
| .47 missed EDU-25, which was a time sharing BASIC system.
I used to have the sources of it at one time.
In fact, checking my copy of the handbook, there were :-
Starter Systems -- EduSystems 5, 10, 15 and 20
Intermediate Systems -- EduSystems 25, 30, 40 and 40/EDP
Total Systems -- EduSystems 50 (and 80)
A footnote on page 10-13 explains "EduSystem 80 is only available
on the PDP-11. Contact the Educational Products Group, or refer
to the PDP-11 Resource Time-sharing System Users Guide
(PL-11-71-01-01-AD) for more information.".
Other careful reading reveals that "A Total System means
time-sharing power to handle the whole school's needs simultaneously,
and resource sharing power that keeps the whole computer at work
all day long.". To do this, an EduSystem 50 required a minimum of
16k 12 bit words of memory. Another feature was that it supported
file sizes (on disk or DECtape) of up to 350,000 characters. Supported
languages were Fortran-D, Focal, Algol, Basic and PDP-8 assembler.
Dave
|
90.51 | 11/74 mini-history | SCOTCH::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Sun May 11 1986 01:00 | 24 |
| re: 11/74
As I (mis)remember it, the 11/74 was essentially an 11/70, but had two plusses:
dedicated cpu backplane slots for a "commercial instruction
set" (just like the way the floating-point option works), and
quad-ported MOS memory, so you could hook up to four of them
together in a multi-processing configuration.
I remember some of the RSX-11M folks being pulled to work on hacking
together a version of -M that would run this beast. I heard they even got
a 2-CPU version up and running.
It never got into volume production, though. It was never sold to
customers (although I seem to remember us having a hard time getting one
back from a field-test site).
After it was withdrawn, all the units built were sold to in-house groups
who wanted -70's and couldn't get them.
All this was in 1973.
Ray
|
90.52 | | BEING::BEZEREDI | Paul Bezeredi | Mon May 12 1986 09:33 | 8 |
| re: the 11/74
A quad processor still lives in the raised floor computer room in ZK1.
RSX-11M-PLUS was originally designed to support the 74 and the code is still
there.
- pb (co-author of M-PLUS)
|
90.53 | More on the 11/74 story... | BEING::PETROVIC | If you don't do it, no one will... | Mon May 12 1986 12:35 | 7 |
| >A quad processor still lives in the raised floor computer room in ZK1.
>RSX-11M-PLUS was originally designed to support the 74 and the code is still
>there.
In fact, the RSX Group still uses Castor for RSX-11M-PLUS and Micro/RSX
development. It is the LAST remaining (I believe) multi-processor 11/74
still in use in the Corporation...
|
90.54 | This wire goes here.... | POTARU::QUODLING | It works for me.... | Mon May 12 1986 20:15 | 5 |
| And I understand it is on a raised floor because of the numerous
cables involved.
q
|
90.55 | ELROND was an 11/74 | SMAUG::GARROD | | Mon May 12 1986 21:15 | 6 |
| ELROND the DECnet/RSX group's development system used to be a dual
11/74. It got dismantled and never reincarnated in the move from
Tewksbury to Littleton. I think DECnet/RSX still has multi-processing
code conditional assembled out.
Dave
|
90.56 | Corrected dates for 11/74 | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Tue May 13 1986 02:02 | 12 |
| The 11/74 project was not as early as 1973. In 1976, there was advanced
development activity to determine how to modify RSX-11M to work
in a multi-processor environment. As I recall, the AD work was on
a modified 11/34. Then the project was implemented on a modified
11/70--hence the 11/74 name. This project had two parts: a Commercial
Instruction Set processor, and the quad processor. The CIS part
was cancelled around 1979. The quad processor was approved for
announcement by the predecessor to PAC around 1980. It was withdrawn
from announcement the next week because marketing decided it had
no plan! At the time of the cancellation, approximately 100 processors
were in production in Burlington, Vermont. They were used for shipment
to DEC facilities in the New England area.
|
90.57 | 11/74 software | ALIEN::BEZEREDI | Paul Bezeredi | Tue May 13 1986 15:24 | 13 |
| re .56
Pretty much right on the nose. The first more or less usable base levels of
M-PLUS were in early 1977. BL2A which was the first "releasable" base level
was late in 1977 and was the basis for TRAX. BL2A had many short comings and
probably was not the right one to use for TRAX. Looking back I think we
would have done it differently.
The software was initially (up to BL2A) done by a small team of 5 players
working for Bill Munson and Frank Hassett. Only two remain with DEC, Frank
and myself. The remainder of the developers were Kim Kinnear, Peter
Wanheden, Eric Baatz, and Tom Miller.
|
90.58 | | ULTRA::PRIBORSKY | Tony Priborsky | Tue May 13 1986 18:32 | 6 |
| I thought there was a newspaper publishing company in Toronto that
had a 11/74 being used in production. I remember them being one
of the field test sites that refused to let it go because it was
so nice. Is it a myth? (I remmeber this from about 7 years ago
when I was working in the DDC, but I have to admit I never worked
on the machine myself.)
|
90.59 | ... just a myth ... | KAFSV5::READ | Bob | Thu May 15 1986 08:56 | 10 |
| No, the only 11/74 configuration brought into Canada was field tested
by Alberta Government Telephone (AGT). And they, in fact, let it
go for VAX processors. (I'm not sure of the "why" details). The
'74 was taken back by Field Service, which used it for their call
handling and contracts system as two '70's. New backplanes were
ordered for both of them, but only one was ever installed. The
two systems now sit in the Calgary (CGO) office where they're used
for Field Service diagnostic training and testing.
b.
|
90.60 | Another country heard from | ALIEN::MCCARTHY | | Mon May 19 1986 11:47 | 12 |
| re: .54 The RSX development system is in a raised floor room not
because of cable complexity, but more for protection. When the
project was cancelled, the engineering of the above the floor
cable troughs was not yet complete, so we opted for raised floor.
Due to memory cable length, the four CPUs have to be arranged
in a square.
As was pointed out earlier, a significant amount of info on
the 11/74 can be found (I believe) in the RSX support notes
file on VAXWRK.
-Brian
|
90.61 | Now where did he write that? | PHOBOS::LEIGH | Bob Leigh | Tue May 20 1986 20:33 | 10 |
| > As was pointed out earlier, a significant amount of info on
> the 11/74 can be found (I believe) in the RSX support notes
> file on VAXWRK.
I think it was in SYSENG""::SYS$NOTES:PDP11.NOT.
(A NOTES-11 notesfile, the last time I looked.)
Much of the detail that's there was entered by the author of .-1.
Bob
|
90.62 | PDT history? | BOEBNR::BOEBINGER | | Sun May 25 1986 21:58 | 5 |
| By the way, what's the history of the PDT series? The PDT-11/110,130,
and /150 got released, but I understand there was also something
called the PDT-11/250 in the works at one point.
john
|
90.63 | | IMBACQ::LYONS | | Thu May 29 1986 14:38 | 17 |
| RE: .56
> This project had two parts: a Commercial
> Instruction Set processor, and the quad processor. The CIS part
> was cancelled around 1979. The quad processor was approved for
There were two proto units built. We had one 11/74 CIS system
running as a single (fast) CPU up until last year but it was
scraped (we still have the spares though).
There was a third part to the project. A little module called
the IIST ("eye_squared_S_T" stood for Interprocessor Interrupt and
Sanity Timer). This provided the path to synchronize the separate
CPUs and allowed for some high availability hooks where one processor
could be re-booted by the others.
Bob L.
|
90.64 | | GEM::ANDY_LESLIE | dead, in downtown Blazingsmoke | Fri Sep 05 1986 11:53 | 2 |
|
I hear tell Y0.00 of VMS ran on an 11/70. True?
|
90.65 | First VAX | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Fri Sep 05 1986 13:33 | 8 |
| > I hear tell Y0.00 of VMS ran on an 11/70. True?
Don't know about Y0.00, but the VAX hardware was emulated in the Mill in
'75-'76 on a pair of PDPs (probably 11/70s, can't remember now)
so this may have started the rumor.
The story at the time was that a couple of 16-bit machines were being
run in parallel to make one 32-bit CPU ... :-)
|
90.66 | | POTARU::QUODLING | Technocrats of the world... Unite! | Fri Sep 05 1986 20:41 | 5 |
| Word that I had heard, andy, was that the Original 780's were
proto-ed in drastically modified 11/70 backplanr/cabinets.
q
|
90.67 | RE:.66 | SYSENG::COULSON | Roger Coulson | Wed Sep 10 1986 09:26 | 9 |
| I remember seeing a couple of PDP-11/70's highly modified so that
they would run VAX code. They had a very large WCS and ran at about
1/10 real time of the "Star" prototype. I think there were 2 of
these funny 11/70's and one proto here in the Mill on ML3-5. In
those days they even frosted the windows so that no one would see
them from the hall.
/s/ Roger
|
90.68 | | NAC::SEGER | | Wed Sep 10 1986 16:50 | 9 |
| I remember those frosted windows all too well. At the time, security (as far
as locked labs go) was virtually unheard of. The first time anyone came to
this odd looking room the normal thing was to go in and see why it was frosted.
Then, upon finding out the door was locked you'd go and ask someone why and were
told something like, "that's where they're building the VAX, but don't tell
anyone 'cause it's a secret", even though everyone knew what the VAX was. You
just couldn't see one.
-mark
|
90.69 | How the VAX Architecture was simulated in 1975 | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Fri Oct 31 1986 22:29 | 10 |
| re .66: (From one of the hardware designers of the 780)
The "hardware simulator" was not made from an 11/70, although they may
have used some 11/70 I/O equipment. The box was a microprogrammed data
path (like the 780 and 750) but was very flexible without much
dedicated hardware for address modes, etc. so that it could change when
the architecture changed. I can't recall any more how it was
constructed but I'd guess that it was wire-wrapped on specially built
collage modules. Physically, I think it was mounted in two 72"
cabinets.
|
90.70 | Star processor was s/w simulated | TILLER::SEARS | Paul Sears, SHR1-4/D27, 237-3783 | Wed Nov 05 1986 11:36 | 11 |
| The Star processor was also software simulated. The CAD group (ML1-1)
(actually Phil Corman) coded a MIMIC-based Register Transfer Level (RTL)
simulator of the -780 processor. It was used for debugging the microcode.
Also the same approach was used for the 11/74 Commercial Instruction Set
processor. That project was on again/off again a few times and was finally
canceled. I know, i coded the simulator and never got to completely debug it!
The CIS was an AMD2901 bit sliced architecture design with about a 60 bit wide
microword.
paul sears
|
90.71 | Anything about the 36-bit "Jupiter"? | ORKO::KEMERER | Senior System Software Specialist (8,16,32,36 bits) | Thu Dec 04 1986 21:56 | 6 |
| Haven't seen anything about the 36-bit Jupiter project that suddenly
went "south". Anyone know anything about what it looked like, what
it's performance was, why the project died, etc?
Warren
|
90.72 | | MILT::JACKSON | Is she a member of the thought police, or just another spy | Fri Dec 05 1986 07:57 | 14 |
| From all accounts I heard, JUPITER was 'out of control'.
It was way over budget, and manufacturing could not consistently
manufacture a machine that worked.
I spoke with one of the engineering managers one day when I was
on a customer visit. He's now a salesperson in the NYC office,
handling Citicorp.
-bill
|
90.73 | Well, they were trying for high performance, but | MAY20::MINOW | Martin Minow, MSD A/D, THUNDR::MINOW | Fri Dec 05 1986 11:23 | 3 |
| According to rumor, they had a few problems ECO'ing the speed of light.
M.
|
90.74 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Fri Dec 05 1986 11:32 | 4 |
| It's interesting that the CUSTOMERS have the perception that it was mainly due
to a decision to focus on the VAX architecture.
/john
|
90.75 | | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Fri Dec 05 1986 15:35 | 11 |
| A story I heard at the time from a reputable source was that the
project team based their work on a preliminary estimate of CPU speed
using a simulation program, into which was fed a (Gibson-like) "mix"
of the supposedly most frequently-executed instructions.
Unfortunately, the mix they used was old, out-of-date, and consisted
of non-privileged user instructions. In particular it omitted one
specific instruction which was used frequently by the TOPS system;
the consequence was that when the prototype began to run and TOPS-20
was booted, the average instruction rate was nowhere near what the
simulation had predicted.
|
90.76 | The day Jupitor fell into the Sun... | TLE::MCCUTCHEON | Charlie McCutcheon | Fri Dec 05 1986 18:38 | 5 |
| The impression I had at the time was that if it was shipable when
it was cancelled that they may have shipped it. But since it was
not ready that it would be too little too late.
KO came down and gave us a pep talk that didn't quite pep us...
|
90.77 | | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | The Monday that wouldn't quit! | Wed Dec 17 1986 16:31 | 60 |
| Re:.71
The following is a memo regarding the JUPITER project a friend forwarded
to me a couple of years ago. I don't know when it went out (I started at DEC
2.5 yrs ago) and I don't remember who wrote/sent it out but believe it was
one of the managers of the project.
-Jim
As I said, the problems with Jupiter, which ultimately resulted in
its demise, can be summarized as:
1) The architects didn't understand the PDP-10 architecture to the
point where they could predict which instructions would be executed
most frequently. Consequently, the machine they designed took too
long to do frequent operations, like effective address calculation, or
extend operations.
2) Relating to 1), and compounded by a lack of money to fund engineers,
the design was "hand waved" in certain critical areas; thus, when they
built the breadboards, they found out that the Ibox could not be made
to work. They redesigned the Ibox twice, but the problem was subtle
faults in the machine architecture.
3) Because of 1), and some by 2), the microcode store turned out to be
inadequate to implement the PDP-10. The current design had 4K words,
and they needed more like 16K.
4) The design was too complex for the CAD/CAM approach that was taken.
Because all the timing analysis, (for example) was done by hand, there
were many mistakes. Timing skews were a real problem. The simulation
done was minimal, with the result that with a design of this
complexity (60K+ gates) the machine could not press the technology
hard enough (signals take a whole nanosecond to go less than a foot of
foil, etc.) to get adequate performance. The design goal was a cycle
time (i.e., microclock rate) of 22 nanoseconds. This is enough time
for a beam of light to go from one end of the cab to the other side,
and back. Not much time for logic.
When they tried to fix all these problems, they ran into others. They
ran out of power in the CPU bay, the memory didn't have the bandwidth
to support the CPU performance, there were cooling problems, etc. It was a
size 0000 can of worms.
The design did work, and it did implement the PDP-10, including extend
instructions (although you needed different microcodes if you wanted
to do floating point, for example), but it would have been just a
little slower than a KL10 for the same money. Fixing it would take
three (lets be realistic, five) years. It was decided that it wasn't
worth it.
IBM, too, found with its 3081 series that hand design methods just
didn't do the job. INTENSE cad/cam is what they finally did. It took
them fourteen (seriously) years to go from start development of the
TCM technology, to the first announcement of the first product (3081.)
Do forward this to the appropriate people..
|
90.78 | | CADLAC::ROBERT | | Fri Jan 02 1987 12:16 | 9 |
| re .77
There was also a problem with the two individuals that were designing
the machine. They hated each others guts. It seems to me that that
problem should have been resolved by their boss. But it was not.
This was a major cause of the machine failing. There is a lot of
information that is not known about the real reasons that this project
failed.
|
90.79 | Other project near-disasters | GOBLIN::MCVAY | Pete McVay, VRO (Telecomm) | Mon Jan 05 1987 07:48 | 15 |
| A few DEC products end up failing--or nearly so--because of personality
conflicts.
MINC I--the laboratory machine--nearly got derailed because of major
conflicts at the grass-roots (peon) level, and the middle managers
admitted that they didn't know how to handle it. A complete shift
of responsibilitiy to different managers finally sorted things out
(one of the rare cases where reorganization was both meaningful
and effective).
IVIS was years late in development and delivery, in my opinion,
because middle and upper management were not effective. The project
kept getting whipped around, and technical issues were either ignored
or surpressed. IVIS is an example of a good idea gone wrong because
of poor planning and leadership.
|
90.80 | | NEWVAX::LAFFERTY | Maybe I think too much. | Thu Jan 15 1987 08:27 | 13 |
| RE.: .74
When I started with DEC in '79, installing and maintaining KS10's
(DECSYSTEM-2020's) it was told to me that they would not catch-on due to
them supposedly being direct competition to the 780's. I would say that
it has not been just a customer perception that we have become the VAX
Corporation by paring down architechtures and operating systems. Many
people who had worked in LCG before July '83's announcement felt that
20's and TOPS-20 would be around for a long time to come. Obviously
not so. Now VAX/VMS people feel that VAX will be around for a long time
to come. I wonder.
lee
|
90.81 | New machines | GOBLIN::MCVAY | Pete McVay, VRO (Telecomm) | Thu Jan 15 1987 09:36 | 10 |
| For obvious reasons, any discussion of a "new machine" technology
wouldn't be posted in a NOTES Conference. I would guess, however,
that there are post-VAX machines being designed and built within
DEC somewhere.
PR1ME announced a new computer with parallel-processing architecture,
in an obvious move to overtake companies like DEC and IBM. One
joke about the VAX development project was that it was the worst-kept
secret in the industry. Perhaps DEC learned from this, and is keeping
things under wraps.
|
90.82 | New Machine Secrets Leaked | GHANI::KEMERER | Sr. Sys. Sfw. Spec.(8,16,32,36 bits) | Thu Jan 15 1987 16:58 | 8 |
| Talk about secrets leaking. Check out the "Charlie Matco" column
in the latest issue of "Digital Review". It mentions some pretty specific
code names for DEC's next generation of processors. Obviously there
are some within DEC that can't keep secrets. Either that or "Charlie"
has a direct line "bug" in some VIP's office.
Warren
|
90.83 | How does Charlie do it? | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Thu Jan 15 1987 17:13 | 11 |
| I really don't know how Charlie does it, but his references to a hunting lodge
for rich weirdos (or whatever he said) make me think that he does some variation
on the following scenario:
Charlie has contacts with a number of headhunters. Once a year,
with the help of the headhunters, he invites all the headhunters
and a select list of people who have just left DEC that the head-
hunters have provided to the lodge, all expenses paid. There he
pumps everyone for info.
/john
|
90.84 | talk's cheap, leaks aren't | REGENT::MERRILL | If you've got it, font it. | Fri Jan 16 1987 08:51 | 11 |
| re: "secrets" It is no secret that customers who sign "Non-Disclosure"
agreements *TALK*. It's hard to catch 'em, and I doubt we'd procecute
them if caught. Sooo, always remind people that '___ is company
confidential information' otherwise they might think that because
you mentioned enjoying the lobster and the FizVax project in the
same breath that they were both casual mentions. [ oops, forget
I said "FixVax Project" back there! ]
Rick
Merrill
|
90.86 | Another Possiblity | LA780::GOLDSMITH | Reserved for Future Use. | Fri Jan 16 1987 13:12 | 23 |
| One possibility is the following:
1: Go to DECUS and make note of the DECies that seem to know what
is going on.
2: Hang out at the pizza places, shusi houses, and Chinese
restaurants local to important DEC facilities or even DECUS.
3: Change tables a lot.
This is an over simplified view, however, when I worked for a third
party controller company this worked with some degree of success.
Now, you may ask how one man could do all this? In Charlie's last
article he said he could be a group of people and no one person.
Even if there is a Charlie Matco, I'm sure he is not personally
responsible for obtaining all the information he reports.
--- Neal
|
90.87 | | NY1MM::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Sat Jan 17 1987 19:48 | 2 |
| Interesting discussion, but what does this have to do with "Digital
History"?
|
90.88 | Future History? ;-) | RDGENG::CORNE | Cancer Cures Smoking | Wed Jan 21 1987 11:43 | 1 |
|
|
90.89 | | BMT::BRASH | | Fri Aug 19 1988 21:01 | 6 |
| BTW...
Charlie Matco aka Terry C. Shannon
-yuval brash
|
90.90 | What about the pro series... | BMT::BRASH | | Fri Aug 19 1988 21:03 | 8 |
| Any histories on the pro series.
Before joing Digital 2 years ago I though that the pro was sombody's
idea of a joke that got sent to production by accident.
-Yuval Brash
PS. I apologize to anyone who takes offense at my statement.
|
90.91 | | HYDRA::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Fri Aug 19 1988 22:50 | 6 |
| re: .89
> Charlie Matco aka Terry C. Shannon
Shannon turned in his trench coat and coffee mugs at the end of
last year.
|
90.92 | The new Charlie | ENUF::GASSMAN | | Fri Aug 26 1988 14:46 | 3 |
| Charlie Matco is now Mike Lazor (spelling?)
bill
|
90.93 | DEC_HISTORY NOTES FILE | PYRITE::PEARSON | | Fri Oct 07 1988 12:09 | 5 |
| Please be advised there is a notes file dedicated to Digital's history:
LDP::DEC_HISTORY.
Jamie
|
90.94 | Moved by Moderator | PIWACT::KLEINBERGER | Most of an angel is in the inside | Fri Oct 07 1988 16:38 | 16 |
| <<< HUMAN::DISK$HUMAN_WRKD:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note XXX.0* DEC_HISTORY NOTES FILE No replies
PYRITE::PEARSON 9 lines 7-OCT-1988 11:55
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A notes file dedicated solely to Digital's history resides on LDP::
DEC_HISTORY. It is moderated by the Digital Historical Collection
Program.
Having seen the interest in history/culture in this notes file, I
thought I'd pass on the info.
Jamie
|