I just realized I am the same age as the transistor (though it in fact
got smaller as it got older, and I did not).
Does anyone know please of a forum (this one?) with interest in
disruptive technology, i.e. components or processes that quickly changed
the gameplan?
Obviously at some tipping point ICs became cheaper and easier than
analog components, in 1945 V2 weapon guidance has mechanical gyros, but
15 years later a Minuteman uses quad nand gate ICs.
Behind DEC's PDP-1, funky light brown paint and all, is presumably some
contemporary innovation in packaging or fab process? I never had a
relationship with a PDP-1, but I could generate similar nostalgia for
the first commercial use of VHDL, for instance.
Any idea where people like me go to live again my idea of the good old days?
Thanks.
Roy
*Roy Hirst* | 425-556-5773 | 425-324-0941 cell
XKL LLC | 12020 113th Ave NE, Suite 100 | Kirkland, WA 98034 | USA
On 12/9/2014 6:04 PM, Ian S. King wrote:
There are artifacts that are good candidates for
'living' restoration, and
those that are candidates for 'preservation' as elements of the historical
record. Thus do archival science, history and museology intersect, with
somewhat unpredictable results at times. :-)
On Thu, Dec 4, 2014 at 4:30 PM, Al Kossow <aek at bitsavers.org> wrote:
On 12/4/14 4:25 PM, Eric Smith wrote:
CHM does have *a* PDP-1 prototype
Correct. DEC's original prototype in funky light brown cabinet paint.
http://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/102666958
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