They can't have enforced it all that hard. I've seen a few like these:

http://www.update.uu.se/~pontus/slask/front_paneler/pdp-8m-cc-computer-control.JPG
http://www.update.uu.se/~pontus/slask/front_paneler/pdp-8e-cddp.jpg
http://www.update.uu.se/~pontus/slask/front_paneler/pdp-8l-UCC.jpg

/P


On Tue, Jun 09, 2015 at 06:50:52PM +0100, Rod Smallwood wrote:
> There was a letter that went to a large terminals digital oem in
> about 1975 stating as below as being  the position.
> Guess who signed the letter? I''ll give you a hint. It wasn't Ken Olsen!
> 
> On 09/06/2015 15:30, Paul Koning wrote:
> >>On Jun 9, 2015, at 3:58 AM, Rod Smallwood <rodsmallwoo...@btinternet.com> 
> >>wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>DEC was very keen on its OEM business and if the order was big enough would 
> >>allow some variation in colours but would not allow the dec logo to be 
> >>removed or changed.
> >I’m not sure if that’s completely true.  I remember a PDP11 (11/45 probably) 
> >at the University of Illinois, around 1975.  It was used as a terminal 
> >controller for ARPAnet.  The system was called ANTS (not sure what that 
> >stands for), and it had a custom logo panel for the top of the H960 racks, 
> >in red and yellow, showing large ants crawling all along the cabinets.
> >
> >Not allowing the logo to be changed would make sense, since that is one of 
> >the rules of trademarks: you risk losing a trademark if you don’t use it 
> >consistently, for example if you create or allow variations of what was 
> >registered.
> >
> >     paul
> >
> >
> 

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