Geoff Roberts wrote:
From: Tom Owad <owad(a)applefritter.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Sent: Sunday, 5 September 1999 11:00
Subject: End of Prodigy Classic
Prodigy discontinuing thier Prodigy Classic
service on October 1.
a bank of outmoded minicomputers and mainframes
Any idea what they are? I seem to recall that the original Compu$erve ran
on Pr1mes of
some kind, but no idea what Prodigy used. Vaxen? IBM 370's?
Actually, CompuServe ran on PDP-10 (DecSystem 10's) and System Concepts
DecSystem 10 clones.
Compuserve (which began as MicroNet) actually reengineered pieces of the
10 and designed their own switching power supply for KL-10's and rewrote
a large part of the OS.
Interestingly enough, they also let you get down to KL-10 timesharing
level if you wanted to and they let you write your own programs
to run on their machines.
They also invented the Gif file and two protocols for file transfer over
RS232 (CIS-A and CIS-B).
The Source ran on Prime systems.
Delphi (General Videotex?) ran on Vax 11/780's.
I subscribed to all three at different times.
Is anybody
going after those computers? Sounds like a very historically
significant groups of systems.
I'd have to agree, hopefully they will find an honourable retirement with
someone,
a museum should be interested, given the significance of the service they
ran.
Sounds reasonable.
They probably will get scrapped, though. I figure they'll be Prime
spare parts for folks still running Prime systems. Still better
than gold scrap.
Cheers
Geoff Roberts
Computer Systems Manager
Saint Mark's College
geoffrob(a)stmarks.pp.catholic.edu.au
Bill
---
bpechter@shell.monmouth.com|pechter@pechter.dyndns.org
Three things never anger: First, the one who runs your DEC,
The one who does Field Service and the one who signs your check.