Cool. Same shade of blue.
On Fri, Nov 20, 2020 at 12:10 PM Eric Moore wrote:
> Oh wow! This is incredible to see, thank you!
>
>
> http://vtda.org/docs/computing/SEL/SEL810ProgrammersReferenceCard(810A-810B)_1Mar69.pdf
>
> Here is the equivalent 810A document I scanned.
>
> -Eric
>
> On Fri,
Oh wow! This is incredible to see, thank you!
http://vtda.org/docs/computing/SEL/SEL810ProgrammersReferenceCard(810A-810B)_1Mar69.pdf
Here is the equivalent 810A document I scanned.
-Eric
On Fri, Nov 20, 2020, 10:46 Tony Aiuto wrote:
> I found some MPX -32 items this week. Rough scans here:
I found some MPX -32 items this week. Rough scans here:
https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipOBnMkRJvzAsOCloK4NBQM9iDoROPk-QPXBANxNg2yjsJhWlEj9Z0TN50wYKgwJkA?key=YjNyYndsLXhKZ2VYTHM3b21yNDFYNkFHa3NYbDFn
I want to redo them to send to bitsavers.
On Sun, Nov 8, 2020 at 10:51 PM Eric Moore
You are welcome! I have had a blast restoring and running my SEL 810A and
wanted to pull together some of what I had found, done, and helped with. It
is really just a placeholder for now until there is a critical mass of
interest.
The SEL 810 emulators are really awesome. Kgober's can run SEL
Eric:
Thanks for starting this. I've been doing little updates to the SEL
wikipedia pages recently, but a dedicated site would be great. I used the
machines heavily from 1977-1995, most of the 32/X series, as well as the
NP1. AFAIK, I was the first person to get C++ (cfront) working under
Al said
> On 11/6/20 12:11 PM, Tom Uban via cctalk wrote:
>> The ECL based logic was named "firebreather" for a reason. They were the
>> fastest thing at the time.
>
> If you look at the Gould advertising at the time, it was a picture of a
> fire-breathing dragon toasting a DEC salesman running
On 11/6/20 12:11 PM, Tom Uban via cctalk wrote:
The ECL based logic was named "firebreather" for a reason. They were the
fastest thing at the time.
If you look at the Gould advertising at the time, it was a picture of a
fire-breathing dragon toasting a DEC salesman running away.
I worked at Gould CSD in Urbana on the Powernode Unix kernel from '86-'88
and knew the machines were descendants of SEL machines, but that is about
it. The ECL based logic was named "firebreather" for a reason. They were the
fastest thing at the time. Being a computer company in Urbana Illinois,
My memories of SEL beginnings are dusty. and rusty. I recall a bunch
of their systems being used in science related efforts, beecause of
the high IO capability. At the time, for NASA and others, it was the
ideal platform for data collection. Not a bad compute capability -
many other systems in
Hello, I have pulled together a website with links to resources and
information on SEL, or Systems Engineering Laboratories.
http://mnembler.com
SEL was a computer manufacturer in the 60s and 70s which later was acquired
by Gould and then Encore. They made many major innovations and were
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