I just read part of the Grant Saviers interview from CHM, where near the end he gives a
bit of history of DECtape. In particular, the fact that it was derived from LINCtape
though the format details are quite different.
A question popped into my mind, prompted by having read Guy Fedorkow's paper about
Whirlwind just a few days earlier: the Whirlwind tape format has 6 physical tracks but 3
logical tracks (each logical track is recorded redundantly on two physical tracks) and one
of those tracks is a clock track. LINCtape and DECtape have the same redundant recording
scheme, and also have a clock track; the difference is that they add a mark track to
enable the recording of block numbers and in-place block writing.
That made me wonder if LINCtape was, in part, inspired by the Whirlwind tape system, or if
those analogies are just a concidence.
Incidentally, it's probably not widely known that LINCtape/DECtape is not the only
tape system with random block write capability. Another one that does this is the
Electrologica X1 tape system, which uses 1/2 inch 10 track tapes, which include a clock
and a mark track. An interesting wrinkle is that the X1 tape system lets you chose the
block size when formatting the tape, and then data block writes allow for the writing of
any block size up to the formatted block size. I'm not sure when that device was
introduced; the documentation I have is from 1964. There's no sign the designers knew
of DECtape (or vice versa).
paul