On 6/7/24 20:42, Vincent Slyngstad via cctalk
wrote:
On 6/7/2024 6:19 PM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
> OK, I have to chime in here. I worked for Artronix about 1972.
> The LINC computer was developed at MIT for use in biomedical
> research labs, and a bunch of people involved with it later moved
> to Washington University in St. Louis. The Biomedical Computer Lab
> there later added some features such a a crude memory mapping unit
> and more memory, and called this the Programmed Console, so as not
> to scare people away. Artronix began building these PC's and
> selling them to hospitals for radiation therapy planning. I have
> no idea how many were sold. They were built into a desk, and used
> 7400-series logic chips. They etched their own PC boards, drilled
> them by hand and soldered in the chips by hand. I wrote a series
> of diagnostics for them.
Do any survive? I've looked for them but never found one.
An Artronix PC? I seriously doubt it, but it is possible. There is
at least one LINC that was restored about a decade ago, and taken
out to VCF 10. If an Artronix PC did evade the scrapper, it would
not be that hard to get it running again.
Even maintenance drawings would be great.
Does any software survive? Diagnostics would be cool, but so would
MUMPS. Not sure the radiology software would be useful, but it would
still be of historic interest.