MODCOMP! Haven't heard that name in years. I'm sitting here with a dark brown 
coffee cup with "+ MODCOMP Computer Systems for Productivity" all over it. In 
the early 1980s they had an operation in Oak Ridge building systems for nuclear 
power plants. I did a sales catalog for them back then and they gave me the cup 
on one of my many visits.

Bernie
bl...@charter.net 


From: Martin, Sam 
Sent: Monday, February 01, 2010 8:37 AM
To: ShopTalk@mail.msen.com 
Subject: RE: ShopTalk: backups (was: Auditor software) ... and a golf club 
question ....


NASA, in the early '80s, used something called a 'mini-computer' produced by an 
outfit, MODCOMP out of Ft. Lauderdale. Armed with a 64KB store using magnetic 
core technology, a Winchester head per track disk subsystem packing a whopping 
4MB of storage, a trio of MODCOMP II's controlled the launch sequence for the  
Space Shuttle. Using a common set of inputs, each computer voted on any given 
step in the launch procedure.  The odd man out on any vote was prohibited from 
taking further part in the decision tree. The OS was written in assembly 
language. NASA was such a stickler for consistency and dependability that 
manufacturing was prohibited from making _any_ changes to the hardware design, 
including fixing any bugs whatsoever in the logic (discrete 7400 chips). Very 
little of the logic was embedded in firmware, it was all hardware, giving the 
beast tremendous performance, and to tell you the truth, it wouldn't surprise 
me to find those MCII's chugging away to this day.

 

 . I have a devil of a time removing masking tape from the shaft when 
re-gripping. I looked at a tool designed to remove tape, a kind of scraper, but 
I can see myself gouging hell out of the graphite shaft on my driver. I haven't 
had a lot of luck using my butane torch and I tire of peeling the stuff off by 
hand. Any suggestions?

 

Sam Martin
C-SPAN
400 N. Capitol St, NW
Suite 650
Washington DC, 20001




 

From: owner-shopt...@mail.msen.com [mailto:owner-shopt...@mail.msen.com] On 
Behalf Of Leo Noordhuizen
Sent: Monday, February 01, 2010 6:53 AM
To: ShopTalk@mail.msen.com
Subject: Re: ShopTalk: backups (was: Auditor software)

 

Dave,

 

You were slightly earlier and closer to the source I guess. When I started with 
computers in 1970, it was with a 4 KB computer, of course using magnetic core 
memory, and teletype and papertape as I/O devices. I very well remember having 
to key in about 12 instructions on the frontpanel as bootloader, to start the 
machine. Programming then was witchcraft in assembly language; a totally 
different activity compared to programming nowadays. But it was only 6 years 
later in 1976 that I was so lucky to visit Bell Labs and meet the likes of 
Dennis Ritchie and Brian Kernighan, and hear about the UNIX operating system, 
which I used since then. Looking at my Android-based mobile phone, based on 
Linux/UNIX, it is sometimes difficult to really grasp the progress what has 
been made in 40 years.

 

Leo Noordhuizen - The Netherlands

On Sun, Jan 31, 2010 at 9:44 PM, Ed Reeder <e_ree...@mailup.net> wrote:

Dave,
I meant physical security in terms of protection from fire and other
forms of destruction.
These sites go to great lengths to ensure that your data is protected
against these potential threats.

/Ed

On Sat, 30 Jan 2010 18:23 -0500, "Dave Tutelman"
<dtutel...@optonline.net> wrote:
<snip>
>
> >One thing to investigate is backing up over the Internet.  It provides
> >both physical security
> >and general availability.
>
> Internet backup trades physical reliability (not security) against
> data security. It is in fact LESS secure, even if more reliable. If
> the backup is on my shelf and not connected to anything (especially
> not the Internet), then it can't be hacked.

--
Shoptalk ** Sponsored by the new Aldila Voodoo.
Learn more at http://aldilavoodoo.com/

 

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