On 11/22/2016 10:09 AM, william degnan wrote:
On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 2:31 AM, Guy Sotomayor Jr<g...@shiresoft.com>
>wrote:
> >The IBM Series/1 was introduced in 1976 and withdrawn in 1988.  There
>were
> >originally 2 models and another 2 models were added later...
Ultimate's Pick implementation for the IBM mainframe had a channel attached Series One with serial channels available for communications to IBM 3151 ASCII terminals. if you ran the usual pile that IBM had, there was a program that ran in the Series one that put up a screen similar to a 3270 on each 3151 terminal, and acted much like a 3270 terminal, but with Ascii terminals and using cursor control and the like to do the screens.

A standalone controller, the 7171 also did that as well.

On the 9121 mainframes there was a 68000 equipped board and subsystem called the Hyfas that did the same directly from boards in the 9121 chassis.

IBM disclosed Ultimate on a method to bypass the 3270 software and do direct I/O for byte I/O to use the terminals on all three of these subsystems like direct attached Ascii terminals.

Also there was a Pick Series one implementation by Pick Blue in Seattle.

I also know that some number of Sears Roebuck stores had Series One systems for their POS control in each store up to the end of life of pretty much a real Sears chain, and the product. There was a large flood of systems at the time that the IBM POS systems were converted to some other backend system (I didn't track what the replacement configuration was).

I've not set foot in a Sears store in 30 years due to them screwing me in 1976, so don't know much about any of their gear since, but I am pretty sure on the Series One from some people who acquired systems at that time, in the early 90s.

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