On Sat, 28 Feb 1998, Tony Duell wrote:
What does PDP
mean, exactly? Is it something like the PC standard?
PDP = Programmed Data Processor. It was the name that DEC used instead of
the word 'Computer' for various reasons, most of them lost in the folklore.
According to _Computer: A History of the Information Machine_ by Martin
Campbell-Kelly and William Aspray (BasicBooks, ISBN: 0-465-02989-2 [hard]
0-465-02990-6 [paper]), Len Olsen is quoted as choosing the name
^^^
I don't know if that's an error in the original, or a typo, but I'm
pretty sure it should be 'Ken'.
Sorry. Blatant typo. It is in fact "Ken" ('k' is right next to
'l').
Programmed
Data Processor because nobody would believe that "in 1960
computers that could do the job could be built for less than $1 million."
That's certainly one of the reasons that I've heard. Another is that
there was either a tax on 'computers' or that if you were a
government-funded place (state funded?) you could only buy 'computers'
from a very few approved companies. So Digital/DEC didn't make
'computers' - they made Programmed Data Processors. Whether either of
those reasons is true I don't know.
I've heard this reason for other "computers" not being called that as
well...things like computers being called calculators because one couldn't
get a computer in the budget.
Sam Alternate e-mail: dastar(a)siconic.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Computer Historian, Programmer, Musician, Philosopher, Athlete, Writer, Jackass
Coming Soon...Vintage Computer Festival 2.0
See
http://www.siconic.com/vcf for details!