On Jun 18, 2020, at 7:21 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
On 18/06/2020 21:31, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
I did see something vaguely similar. Bell 202
modems are 1200 baud FSK, so on a voice channel they normally are 1200 bps half duplex.
They can also be hooked up to 4-wire fixed circuits. But they have a reverse channel,
good for 150 baud if I remember right.
IIRC the Bell standard allows for only 50 baud and the back channel uses ASK (basically
switching a carrier on and off).
That rings a bell (so to speak). Chances are those specs were all pretty lenient and the
126 bps used by PLATO was non-standard but not a real problem.
I don't know how common those connections were or what distance was needed. A large
number of PLATO terminals were fed via a microwave video signal. That was a pretty neat
setup: all 1008 terminal lines, TDM muxed into what looked like a video signal (so 60
frames per second). Devices called "site controllers" would receive that and
extract the data streams for 32 terminals from that data. They'd also accept the 126
bps terminal->host data stream and stat-mux it into a single data stream going to the
host, I don't remember seeing the format for that.
The data center had a TV monitor that showed the outgoing signal. It looked vaguely like
a punched card with a lot more than the usual number of holes in it.
paul