Well, here we are. If you boot up a classic HP 3000 system and simply
hit return when it asks you for the date and time, it will default to:
HP32002E.01.00
WHICH OPTION <WARMSTART/COOLSTART>? COO
ANY CHANGES? N
DATE (M/D/Y)?
WED, NOV 1, 1972, 12:00 AM
LOG FILE NUMBER 64 ON
*WELCOME*
:HELLO OPERATOR.SYS;HIPRI
0:00/13/SP#6/SPOOLED OUT
0:00/#S1/14/LOGON FOR: OPERATOR.SYS,OPERATOR ON LDEV #20
HP3000 / MPE V E.01.00 (BASE E.01.00). WED, NOV 1, 1972, 12:00 AM
which is exactly 50 years ago today. November 1972 was the month that
the very first HP 3000 systems were shipped to customers. Shortly
after this, those initial deliveries were all hastily recalled when it
quickly became clear that they were not yet capable of living up to
their specifications. The 3000 however would go on to recover from
this event and eventually became one of HP's most successful and
profitable product lines, and one of the most beloved computer systems
of all time, regularly beating out IBM, DEC, DG, and others in
customer satisfaction surveys.
For some stories about the earliest days of the platform, I refer you
to the words of Bob Green
http://www.robelle.com/smugbook/classic.html
and Bill Foster
http://www.teamfoster.com/hewlett-packard who were
there.
The original "Classic" CISC HP 3000 systems live on today through Dave
Bryan's most excellent SIMH simulation
http://simh.trailing-edge.com/hp/ and I have a turn-key setup which
will let you have your own 1980-vintage HP 3000 system up and running
in a couple minutes which is downloadable from my Google Drive at
https://drive.google.com/file/d/16vaNUrmfs2aQpjdQijG4PZmJaNu3hfcz
(Save the zip file using the download link in the upper right then
extract it anywhere convenient and see the README file for further
instructions) This only includes a SIMH binary for Windows, but you
can also build a SIMH executable from Dave Bryan's source above for
your platform of choice and use the rest of my infrastructure.
MPE Forever.
G.