Ed;

He was working for the US Air Force in Washington, DC. He was not a 'computer guy', but rather a management person. When I found the certificate in his papers I realized that that was very early in the computer revolution.

I sort of followed in his footsteps and became a physicist at a Gov't research laboratory using computers for numerical simulations.

He didn't think much of computers, even published an article in the National Enquirer in 1972 with the title "Computers are turning us into lame brains".

I always thought that was quite an accomplishment; it is easy to get a paper published in a scientific journal, you have to have a really good angle to get into the National Enquirer!

Doug

On 1/29/2017 6:58 AM, Ed Sharpe wrote:

Doug ... which sites or state was your dad working on them? Railroad owned some IRS too..

Sent from AOL Mobile Mail



------------------------------------------------------------------------
On Saturday, January 28, 2017 Douglas Taylor <dj.tayl...@comcast.net> wrote:

I have a certificate that my father was given in 1957 for training on a
Honeywell Datamatic 1000 computer.

Here is a summary of this 'advance' in computer technology from the ACM:

The DATAmatic 1000 (D-1000) is a high-capacity electronic
data-processing system designed specifically for application to the
increasingly complex problems and procedures of present-day business.
The system incorporates significant new systems techniques, as well as
several basically new component developments. One of the outstanding
features of the D-1000 is its ability to feed information from magnetic
tape into the central processor at a sustained rate of 60,000
decimal-digits per second, and to deliver data after processing back to
magnetic tape at this same rate. The operational speed of the central
processor maintains full compatibility with the high speed of
information transfer. Consequently, the difficulties caused by programs
which are either tape limited or processing-time limited do not arise in
the majority of commercial applications of this system.

Doug


On 1/28/2017 4:13 PM, Tony Aiuto wrote:
> I have a Minivac 601, but it is in storage and I am not sure if it is
> working. I'm thinking of restoring it and bringing to VCF East. The video
> is not mine - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6OA8HfnxxU
>
> On Sat, Jan 28, 2017 at 1:13 PM, Bob Rosenbloom <boba...@sbcglobal.net <mailto:boba...@sbcglobal.net>>
> wrote:
>
>> On 1/14/2017 3:49 PM, Rick Bensene wrote:
>>
>>> --snip
>>> I know what you mean about the DC300 carts...what a lousy design...at
>>> least from a longevity standpoint. I've had numerous nightmares with those >>> cartridges in a number of vintage systems that I've got. Broken tension >>> bands, sticky tape...just plain bad stuff. Plus, the tape transports in
>>> the 4051/4052 are fussy as can be. I have a 4907 single 8" floppy disk
>>> drive for my 4051, and it works great, but I don't have the proper ROMpack >>> module to use it with the 4052, which apparently needs a different ROMpack
>>> than the 4051 to talk to the 4907. So far, such a ROMpack has proven
>>> elusive.
>>>
>>> -Rick
>>>
>> I have the Tektronix 4052/4054 File Manager ROM Packs. Can be seen here:
>> http://www.tekmuseum.com/linked/tek_roms1.jpg
>> I should have the documentation on them also. Only problem is they are
>> buried somewhere in a cargo container.
>>
>> Are you still looking for one?
>>
>> Bob
>>
>>
>> --
>> Vintage computers and electronics
>> www.dvq.com <http://www.dvq.com>
>> www.tekmuseum.com <http://www.tekmuseum.com>
>> www.decmuseum.org <http://www.decmuseum.org>
>>
>>


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