T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
742.1 | Chief Engineer | MSCSSE::LENNARD | | Mon Mar 06 1989 13:52 | 3 |
| Try the office of the Chief Engineer. The first function listed
is "Consulting on New Product Nomenclature." The manager is June
Payne at 223-2912..........Hope this helps.
|
742.2 | Will give her a try | KYOA::SACHS | Isn't M.O.R.F. related to ALF? | Mon Mar 06 1989 15:08 | 4 |
| Thanks for the hint. I'll give her a try. Success or failure will
be posted here.
Mark
|
742.3 | | BMT::SAPIENZA | Knowledge applied is wisdom gained. | Mon Mar 06 1989 18:04 | 10 |
|
Is there really a naming standard in use?
I can see where VT = Video Terminal, and LP = Line Printer, but
what about LA100, or TU80, TS11, etcetera? Some don't seem to make
much sense at all.
Frank
|
742.4 | Et tu, Brute! | KYOA::SACHS | Black, with extra Caffeine, please! | Mon Mar 06 1989 18:40 | 2 |
| That's why I asked! As a field person, like yourself, I wondered
if there was any method to this madness.
|
742.5 | Try LDP::DEC_HISTORY | COOKIE::WITHERS | You know you can't memorize Zen | Mon Mar 06 1989 18:44 | 5 |
| If memory serves correctly, this is expalined in grusome detail in
LDP::DEC_HISTORY (KP7 and all that...).
Regards,
BobW
|
742.6 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Mon Mar 06 1989 19:36 | 3 |
| The history of the HW lettering noemclature may be in DEC_History, but
I just looked at all the topic titles there, and it certainly isn't
obvious just where it might be!
|
742.7 | Product names, and such | HSSWS1::GREG | The Texas Chainsaw | Mon Mar 06 1989 19:57 | 38 |
|
Actually, I enjoy the diversity of naming conventions that
come into play, and make a game out of understanding how to
translate them. To draw upon previously mentioned examples,
TU80 = Tape Unit 80
TS11 = Tape Subsystem 11
Whether or not these are valid remains to be seen, but this
is how I remember them. I never did figure out why adding an
HSC interface to a TU made it a TA... that one still bugs me.
I figure it means Tape Access, but that's just a guess. The
storage media group has to be the worst when it comes to naming
conventions.
Except for the cables group... what on eart could be meant
by the name "BNE3K"? "BC16E" seems deceptively simple, until
you try to figure some significance for the 16... is it the
resistance of the line? Perhaps the bandwidth? Maximum
voltage? Wire guage? What the heck does the 16 mean?
Networking products are a lot easier to understand. Their
names are acronyms, almost always starting with DE (Digital
Ethernet). The notable exception is the terminal server line,
which are DS's... I suppose DETS was not considered an appealing
product name.
Are you looking for a real mental challenge? Try finding any
five pieces of software in the price books... it's absolute
insanity! Q-numbers out the wazzoo, split across two books, in
no obvious logical order.
Try using AQS!
What a company... I love the challenges (excuse me,
opportunities).
- Greg
|
742.8 | Dontcha love the 2-5-2 SW Q numbers? | FSADMN::REESE | | Mon Mar 06 1989 20:06 | 7 |
| Re: l7
Pogo *also* said "we are surrounded by insurmountable
opportunities" :-)
Karen
|
742.9 | standards | WR2FOR::BOUCHARD_KE | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2/T7 | Mon Mar 06 1989 20:25 | 11 |
| There *are* conventions:
Anything beginning with "K" pertains to a cpu.
Anything beginning with "M" pertains to memory.(core or mos)
Anything beginning with "D" pertains to data comm.
Anything beginning with "T" pertains to tapes.
Anything beginning with "R" pertains to disks.
Anyway,these are the conventions that prevailed 15 years ago...there
are exceptions now.
BTW: The second letter of an option designation used to mean something
but now it is arbitrary.(or so it seems)
|
742.10 | What about device driver names? | DPDMAI::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Mon Mar 06 1989 22:39 | 13 |
| Given the explosion in our product line in the past few years, it
is next to impossible to have meaningful 2 character letter
combinations.
I must admit, our Ethernet folks seem to have to most fun naming
things. I'm waiting for our news Unibus Ethernet controller to
come out:
The DUMPER
it also gets rid of excess Ethernet traffic :-)
Bob
|
742.12 | Who needs vacuum columns? | WHYVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Tue Mar 07 1989 08:09 | 9 |
| re: < Note 742.7 by HSSWS1::GREG "The Texas Chainsaw" >
> -< Product names, and such >-
> TS11 = Tape Subsystem 11
>
Well, that could be, Greg, but in all the years that I was with the RSTS/E
Engineering group we SWORE that it actually stood for "Tape Stretcher 11"!
-Jack
|
742.13 | Please don't post a lengthy answer here | DR::BLINN | Rule #5: There is no Rule 5. | Tue Mar 07 1989 09:52 | 14 |
| Like Bob Withers, I'm sure this topic has been raised, and beaten
to death, several times in several conferences in the past.
However, other than here (I haven't checked, but I wouldn't be
surprised to find it here already), I believe it has been asked
and answered (without, of course, a definitive answer) in one of
the issues of ASKENET.
If you *do* find a definitive answer, and the information can be
found on-line, please DO NOT POST IT HERE. Post a pointer to
where you found the information. (Unless, of course, it's a page
or less. I'll be amazed if it's that little.)
Tom
|
742.14 | Marching on... | KYOA::SACHS | Black, with extra Caffeine, please! | Tue Mar 07 1989 17:41 | 13 |
| RE: .12
I *was* referring to the *REAL* names. If we added all the
DECrynisms, we could probably fill up an RA90.
RE: .13
'Twas exactly my intent, Tom. If a pointer exists, I would
have provided same (so far, my discovery process hasn't come up
with anything).
If it is "large" and unwieldy for this conference, I'll keep
it locally, and recommend that anyone wanting a copy send me mail,
and I'll FWD the list back.
Mark
|
742.15 | The Oatmeal Standard | DPDMAI::DAVISGB | Let's get Relational! | Tue Mar 07 1989 18:30 | 15 |
| While I was working in Corporate Product Operations, I attended
one of the strategy meetings that produced the 62XX series of VAX'es.
The chairman (Don't think he'd appreciate his name being published
here...), got up and explained the process, which
he likened to mixing up a bowl of oatmeal, throwing some around, and
going with whatever stuck to the walls.
Discussion ensued, oatmeal flew and the 6210 stuck.
Cheers,
Gil
|
742.16 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Tue Mar 07 1989 22:40 | 1 |
| What makes you think it was oatmeal?
|
742.17 | Be nice, now! | KYOA::SACHS | Black, with extra Caffeine, please! | Tue Mar 07 1989 23:21 | 4 |
| Only because one can't get vulgar in these conferences.
Remember, big brother (in this case Tom Blinn) is watching over
us!
|
742.18 | Clear as mud | MPGS::MCCLURE | Why Me??? | Wed Mar 08 1989 08:20 | 25 |
| Other than the first letter naming convention, things get pretty
mixed up. There are 'guidelines' in the product family groups,
but some things occur only because the marketing and engineering
folks want to DIS-associate the product from a dud predecessor.
The tapes family is fairly traditional, but some of the old style
units persist as the 'exceptions'.
T=tapes (general family)
TA= tape assembly and is the general family for reel-to-reel
TB= one that's coming, but I'm not clear about the 'B=' what yet
TC= tape control and is a TCU if a seperate piece
TU= tape drive(transport), couldn't use TT since thats a teletype
Therefore, a TA90 consists of a TC90 and at least one TU90. Simple huh?
TK is for the cartridge tape units.
Initially, the number referred to the form factor EG TK50= 1/2 rack
and 'full' height while the TK30 would have been '1/2' height but then
came higher density in the TK70 that was the same size as the 50 8-).
Then we get into the controllers, TUK for Ubus, TQK for Qbus but then
came the SCSI controller and TSK was out of the question for several
reasons, so it became the TZK.
Bob Mc
|
742.19 | H/W Nomenclature | GIAMEM::GOLDMAN | | Fri Mar 10 1989 16:16 | 4 |
| LA as in LA120, 180 etc. stands for "Line Asynchronous"
There is logic to all of this; simply not known to us.
I suspect the logic is a product of Dick Best.
|
742.20 | | MU::PORTER | what's in a name? | Fri Mar 10 1989 23:00 | 18 |
| Here in NaC, where we build boxes that sit on the Ethernet,
the defacto rule seems to be:
5 letters starting with DE.
Thus the DECnet/SNA Gateway-CT hardware is the DESNA, because "SNA"
seemed vaguely appropriate, although maybe GCT would have fitted in
better with the software name, but we didn't have it at the time.
If we ever build a follow-on, we'd probably call it a DESNB, using
the old increment rule. If we ever built a follow-on to that, though,
we'd be out of luck since someone else has claimed DESNC for the
eNCryption box.
Algorithm: think of a name that fits in with other things you've
seen. Apply to the office of the chief engineer to claim it for
your own. Other people will then use your name as a de facto
standard, and before you know it you're part of a convention.
|
742.21 | Pretty good description in the Engineering Newsletter | THEJUG::WHITE | Willie White | Mon Mar 13 1989 09:43 | 8 |
| There were articles in the Engineering Newsletter last June and September
describing the numbering scheme for option level parts. The articles
were submitted by Marcia Russell of the Chief Engineer's Office.
Probably worth a look. I can photocopy the articles for you if you
can't get them elsewhere.
-willie
|
742.22 | One that didn't make it ;-) | TELGAR::WAKEMANLA | Another Eye Crossing Question! | Thu Mar 16 1989 17:20 | 9 |
| I remember hearing about an ill fated project to produce a DES
encryption board that sat on the unibus.At the time the scheme for
numbering things was AAA11, as opposed to the older AA11A schema. The
first two letters were "KG" indicating that it was an auxilliary
processor. Since there was already a KG11A, it was to be called the
KGB11. Fitting. I heard the government didn't take too kindly to the
name.
Larry
|
742.23 | Too late? | TLE::LIONEL | The dream is alive | Thu Mar 16 1989 18:13 | 7 |
| Re: .22
Then the government can't be too pleased with VMS which has various
symbols used to interface to the security features that have prefixes
such as KGB$, NSA$ and CIA$....
Steve
|
742.24 | HSC... | SKIWVA::MAYNARD | | Thu Mar 16 1989 19:42 | 10 |
|
At an IS Symposium I attended awhile back, one of the presenters
swore that the HSC of the HSCXX stood for Hot "doo-doo" Controller.
They actually had to retrofit the name Hierarchical (sp) Storage
Controller.
May be true, Maybe not...
Brent
|
742.25 | remembrance of things past | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu May 04 1989 11:12 | 10 |
| It finally came to mind. The name of the person who created Digital's
"option designation list" in 1964 was Authur Hall. He was not a "CPU
engineer", so he relegated the CPU options to the letters he had left
over after assigning reasonable letters to the things he was familiar
with. CPUs, even today, have an option number beginning with the letter
K; this isn't for processor "chip" names, but rather for the modules
the chips go on.
Dick Best, as Digital's official "chief engineer", still heads the
office that assigns all the engineering option numbers.
|
742.26 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | twang and toot, not beep or thud | Thu May 04 1989 16:22 | 4 |
| Anyone who has read Bell & Newell's classic text on computer architecture will
recall that in the Processor/Memory/Switch (PMS) notation, "K" was used for
CPUs. If the K convention dates from 1964, then I suspect that Bell took that
with him.
|
742.27 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu May 04 1989 17:03 | 4 |
| Gordon Bell was well aware of the option-number convention in 1964.
Somehow I doubt that was the source of the "K" in the PMS notation, but
I don't have any good reason for the doubt. Next time I see Gordon,
I'll ask him.
|
742.28 | PMS notation | THEJUG::WHITE | Willie White | Sat May 13 1989 21:30 | 10 |
| re: .26
> Anyone who has read Bell & Newell's classic text on computer architecture will
> recall that in the Processor/Memory/Switch (PMS) notation, "K" was used for
> CPUs.
If I'm not mistaken "P" was used for processor in PMS (hence the P in
PMS) and "K" was used for link or link/switch (control) elements.
-willie
|
742.29 | More on PMS | SEEK::HUGHES | Thus thru Windows call on us(Donne) | Thu May 18 1989 14:28 | 9 |
| re .28:
> If I'm not mistaken "P" was used for processor in PMS (hence the P in
> PMS) and "K" was used for link or link/switch (control) elements.
You are indeed correct: the designers of the HSC50 followed that convention
and hence the names "P.io" and "K.sdi".
-Jim
|