On 6/3/22 08:46, Antonio Carlini via cctalk wrote:
On 03/06/2022 03:09, Rick Murphy via cctalk wrote:
On 6/1/2022 12:49 AM, Glen Slick via cctalk wrote:
No one ever called it a "Digital Ethernet Personal Computer Bus
Adapter", just a DEPCA. I never previously knew that there was any
meaning behind the DEPCA name.

Yes, that's what it meant. "DELNI" - Digital Ethernet Local Network Interface. "DESTA" - Digital Ethernet Station Termination Adapter. DELQA - Digital  Ethernet Local Q-Bus Adapter (this one probably means something else. Working?). DEMPR - Multi Port Repeater. DEREP - Repeater.  And so forth. Yeah, nobody spelled it out, but those DExxx names usually meant what the device was. DEBNT, DEUNA, DEQNA. Same naming convention. I'm probably missing several.
    -Rick

The DEPCA manual (http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/ethernet/depca/EK-DEPCA-PR-001_Apr89.pdf) says "DIGITAL Ethernet Personal Computer Adapter", without "Bus".

DELQA was "DIGITAL Ethernet Local-Area-Network to Q-bus Adapter" according to its user guide.

It's predecessor, the DEQNA, was "Digital ETHERNET Q-Bus Network Adapter", according to its user guide, or "broken", according to most people :-)


I see comments like this all the time but I used DEQNA, DELQA,
DELUA and DEUNA for years with minimal problems.  I think most
of the complaints originate after more modern networking equipment
showed up and people's expectations rose beyond the abilities
of the technology.  Like crashing systems by flooding network
segments with traffic.

bill

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