> Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2010 23:34:49 +0200 > From: "dott.Piergiorgio" <dott.piergior...@fastwebnet.it>
> Il 22/08/2010 19:11, Rich Alderson ha scritto: >> I'll do what I can, but there is a problem right up front: They did not >> use standard DECtapes! They wrote huge data blocks containing 8K words >> so that a memory bank could be filled or dumped in a single operation. > really marvelous... the only surviving copy of an historical OS is an > hacked copy.... and decsys-7 itself having also at least three > chronological layers of coding, will be not an easy work figuring out > how U of OR has modded the binary tape we have here.... Ah, no, you misunderstand me. I apologize for misleading you. The physicists at the University of Oregon did not use DECSYS-7. They wrote their own programs, and designed their own data layouts on DECtape. They adapted these to the PDP-9/15 Advanced Software System, but they did not modify the operating system itself, having no need to do so. They owned DECSYS-7 media, because it came with the system when they purchased it in 1966 (installation date in March, according to a document in our files). > This reminds me when, during mid-late 80s, I have written a small piece > of SF centered about "digital archeology".. briefly, the plot was around > the understanding and use of the humanist methods & tools (philology, > collation of editions, textual criticism &c.) by technically-minded > people (I'm actually a sort of polymath more humanist than sci/tech...) > I guess that this shows how I'm feeling now.. I am an Indo-Europeanist historical linguist by training, as well as a programmer, systems analyst, computer scientist, and now museum curator and collections manager. I think I have some idea of houw you feel. :-) >> They also had two hardware modes installed on the machine which allow it >> to execute PDP-9 and bank-mode PDP-15 code, and used the PDP-9/15 operating >> system, rather than DECsys-7, for most of the system's history. I'm not >> sure that SimH can handle their code without some changes--we'll have to >> see once I can begin imaging tapes. > Meh, this is an interesting issue in hardware restoration: this specific > -7 is the lone surviving -7, and there is the decision of keeping it in > its original condition (that is, "standard" PDP-7) or in his actual > working configuration. Al Kossow pointed out two others (I admit I had forgotten the one at CHM), so I know of four (two in Australia, Tore Bekkedal's in Oslo, and CHM) other than ours. Rich Alderson _______________________________________________ Simh mailing list Simh@trailing-edge.com http://mailman.trailing-edge.com/mailman/listinfo/simh