Anyone around 18 in the group?

Mark Jarvis mark.jarvis at pvmail.maricopa.edu
Sun Aug 7 01:16:26 MST 2005


About 1963, GE brought the Dartmouth time sharing system to Phx. It 
coupled a GE235 "mainframe" (which had either 8 or 16K of 20 bit 
words--I don't remember which) with a Datanet 30 Front End Processor. 
They called the combo a GE265 (235+30). I was at Motorola Semi @ 52nd & 
McDowell. They let us use it for free, but we had to rent a tty33 with a 
110 baud modem (that's about 10 char/sec for you young sprouts) from 
AT&T for $60/month. Since about once a week I was greeted by "Disk 
crash, data restored as of ____" when I logged on. I ALWAYS dumped my 
program & data to punch paper tape before signing off.

BTW, I wouldn't take anything for the experiences of those days--but I 
sure wouldn't do it again for anything either!

-mj-
Victor Odhner wrote:

> ec wrote hastily:
>  >Hey, YOU will be 'over 40' someday!!! Don't you
>  >'young'ns' Know how to be PC...
> 
> ... failing to parse my sentence, which was:
>  >>Well, at least a few of you are under 40 . . .
> 
> A few of *you*, I wrote.  None of *me* is under 40,
> except the 50 pounds I have gained since my lovely
> wife began to cook for me 39 years ago.
> 
> Everybody's got Memories.  Lessee ...
> 
> 14 April 1958, at 15, I was a member of the last
> team to report a sighting of Sputnik II as it broke
> up on re-entry.  We shouted trajectory notes into
> a reel-to-reel tape recorder, with WWV playing
> in the background.
> 
> New Year's eve, 1970, I got a whole top-end
> Burroughs mainframe to myself in the factory to
> run an experimental printed circuit router.  Man,
> that machine was the pinnacle.  A whole room full
> of head-per-track disk units, and well over 3 MB
> of memory, but it was a multiprogramming multi-
> processor setup with virtual memory, and no assembly
> language:  programmed totally in ALGOL, including
> the OS.  I had written the programs that wired the
> thing, including the 18,000 wires on the six-foot CPU
> backplanes.  That was three years after I left the
> journalism field to become a technical writer, before
> the days of CS degrees.
> 
> In 1976, I drove 20+ miles to buy my wife some of
> the latest technology:  A hand-held LED calculator.
> Woohoo!  That was just 99 years after great-uncle
> Wilgodt Odhner started the world's first mass
> production line for mechanical calculators.
> 
> In 1983 I got to bring a Morris Microcomputer home,
> to work remotely.  It had two low-density single-
> sided 5-1/4 floppies, total capacity in the 300+ KB
> range.  This CP/M machine had a 64KB memory, a
> BDS C compiler, and an editor called MINCE (Mince
> Is Not a Complete Emacs).  It had a 9600 Baud modem
> so I could upload my work to the office.  I have the
> catalog to prove that its list price was about $4,000,
> and the Honeywell VIP terminal it drove listed for
> another $4,000 -- all this was on the end of our dining
> room buffet.  My ten-year-old son spent hours hacking
> on that thing.  He lives in San Jose now ...
> 
> 'Young'ns' -- hrmf.   :-)
> 
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