Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => The O' Club => Topic started by: Sweet2th on March 16, 2007, 08:25:56 AM
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My astronomy club has this sitting around collecting dust.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_D7eopMX8Ng
Can anyone guess what it is?
Year made-
# of hard drives
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I'm takin a wag at it. the monitor looks very similar to a monitor we had on a data entry terminal at Mountain Home in 1986, (and even then it was a year or so old just setting there collecting dust while we waited for the system to be setup while we used a keypunch machine) it says Digital V1 101 I think. on the right there those look like they might have 10 or 10 1/2 floppy drives. I never used one but my wife worked in finance on base and her office had those drives that used huge floppy disks and i think they were 10 inch floppys. do you have model #s or serial #s?
Year I'd guess 1985 or 86. # of hard drives hard to say, probably 2 or 3, 10 or 20mg hard drives. Most of the pcs we had in the hospital in that time period only had 20 meg hard drives
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Unix? I think we used to use a similar computer for simulating PARS in college.
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similar to a Unisys system I operatored back then...
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Originally posted by Ripsnort
Unix? I think we used to use a similar computer for simulating PARS in college.
I'm pretty sure its a Unix system, cause ours was similar looking and was a unix system were we teleneted in to the server at the hospital to do our data entry.
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Look like a microvax and some disk bay.
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I think I've seen that @ a museum...
Maybe a MiniMinc?
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I have a working Compaq Suitcase computer... one of the first portables ever made. circa mid 80's
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ok been looking on and off today and found a bit, and it might be from 1981 or 82
http://www.dgatx.com/computing/people/Frank-da-Cruz/pubs/2003/CCT/archive.html#1980
(http://www.onpoi.net/ah/pics/users/874_1174072310_vt100-2.jpg)
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1978. Identical in appearance to the original VT100 (1977). Adds local echo, which was needed for using the IBM mainframes in linemode (this was before we had 3270/ASCII protocol converters like the IBM Series/1 or 7171).
Construction: Monitor + detachable keyboard
Display: 24x80 or 14x132 character cells
Character matrix: 7x9 with descenders
Screen size: 12" diagonal (8" x 4.5" active display)
Character set: Complete US ASCII (128 codes)
Keys: 65 keys in ANSI X4.14-1971 typewriter layout
Auxilliary keypad: 18 keys (digits, arrows, function keys)
Visual indicators: 7 LEDs
Interface: RS-232/V.24
Flow control: Xon/Xoff
Communication Speeds: 75,110,150,300,600,1200,2400,4800,9600,19200 bps
Dimensions: 14.5"x18"14.25" (monitor), 3.5"x18"x8" (keyboard)
Minimum table depth: 20.25"
Weight: 41 pounds
(http://www.onpoi.net/ah/pics/users/874_1174073526_vt101.jpg)
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ok the RKO7 is the disk drive...
WBC-3000 RK07 INTERFACE
This WBC controller allows replacement of the Digital Equipment Corporation DEC RK07 Disk Drive, a 14-inch removable platter drive with 30mb capacity.
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I learned to type on a state of the art 1981 IBM computer in high school. This was in 1997/98 btw.
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My mom made me take Typing I and II and Business Machines in High School 75-76. I hated it, I was the only guy in class full of girls (well it wasnt all bad) i thought the class was a waste of time and barely passed.
we used manual typewritters for the first 2 months then brand new IBM electric typewritters. then I graduate and join the Air Force and learn how to use computers while a lot of the other guys were pumping gas and working at the local feed & seed. who knew that mom's were so smart..
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(http://www.zen33071.zen.co.uk/disk56.jpg)
It's a hard disk in 1956....
The Volume and Size of 5MB memory storage in 1956.
In September 1956, IBM launched the 305 RAMAC, the first computer with a
hard disk drive (HDD). The HDD weighed over a ton and stored 5MB of data.
Makes you appreciate your 4 GB USB flashdrive, doesn't it?
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its what I think my pc turns into whenever there is more than 10 people in a furball:(