We've got one, with a n Eagle and some sort of tape, I think. I takes 2
cabinets, but we've never got around to playing with it, altrhough things
have been progressing well at the arehouse, so we may look into it before
long.
On Wed, 24 Nov 2004, Joe R. wrote:
At 12:47 PM 11/24/04 +0000, you wrote:
On Wed, 2004-11-24 at 07:25 -0500, Joe R. wrote:
Does anyone on this list play with the Masscomp
computers?
I'm the only person I've ever seen ask about them on here :)
They seem to be pretty much unknown. I haven't found the keyboard/mouse
yet for the one at the museum, so seeing what state it's in is a long
term project at present! It's also missing a castor, but that's the
least of the problems ;)
Andrew K. Bressen replied to me with the following info:
///
Masscomp did indeed make multi-cpu machines,
Yeap, each chassis can have up to four CPU cards. I think the dual
chasssis machines could have up to eight but I'd have to check on that.
and also had an os called RTU (Real Time Unix).
Yeap, I just sent that manual to Al K. I have at least three other
manuals here.
They also had another unix called, I think,
OS/32.
I don't know which one was used by the multiprocessor boxes.
I think the CPUs were mostly 68k's,
The CPU in mine is 68020. It's card looks similar to Multibus but is
longer and has different connector. (I'll post pictures later.) It plugs
into the SMI bus. There's also a Multibus chassis in them for the IO cards
AND there's also STD+ card sockets in them for data acquisition cards. STD+
is an enhancment of the regular STD bus. Some of them also had VME sockets!
The use of four different busses really surprised me.
system bus might have been multibus.
They had early successes as graphics/cad workstations,
so yes they had mice.
Some did, some didn't. Some only used termials but others had graphics
capabilities. I think mine all just used terminals.
Masscomp was bought by Concurrent,
so there used to be some info on the concurrent
users
group web pages at
www.ccuruser.org. That seems gone now,
but
archive.org might help you dig up some old stuff there.
There'll be lots more there soon!
I used to help run one at the Columbia U CS dept; I remember that the
ethernet card had an 80186 that the OS downloaded a network stack to.
It uses an Excelan EXOS 201 Intelligent Multibus Ethernet Controller. I
have manuals for it. One of them has already gone to Al.
I seem to recall a hardcoded 14 or 15-hop limit on
the IP stack on the
version we had, which confused us for a while when we wondered why the
machine would talk to some machines but not others.
I believe the owner of
vitriol.com may still have a number of
operational or nearly-operational masscomps.
I'll check and see if they want some more. These are too neat to destroy.
Joe
///
--
M. K. Peirce
Rhode Island Computer Museum, Inc.
Shady Lea, Rhode Island
"Casta est quam nemo rogavit."
- Ovid