On 5/31/16 1:53 PM, Al Kossow wrote:
On 5/31/16 1:38 PM, Jerry Wright wrote:
Don Maslin had most of them. I sent copies of
mine to him and he sent
copies of his to me. of coarse that a few years ago.
They didn't survive to what was left in the storage locker. I just looked
again at what I read when we got them at CHM (about 900 disks) and they
aren't there. They also weren't on the aardvark system backup from 2002.
Can you send me copies of what you have?
also, came across this today
I had forgotten about "product factoring"
at the end, some machines were saved in the bay area. I have a rather large pile of
8010/8090 boards
and four 8090s that another list member saved when he lived in Santa Cruz in the late
90's.
--
http://www.jerrypournelle.com/archives2/archives2mail/mail147.html
Jerry, I've been chasing a subject around the 'net via web pages and e-mails for a
couple of weeks and have had no luck
finding what I'm looking for. You're fond of saying that we're now in an era
when most every question has an answer, but
my answer is probably still locked into a human brain. So I though I'd try the tap at
your web site to see if any of
your readers are able to help me.
For research and personal reasons, I am trying to obtain a functioning Xerox GlobalView
system. Now this kind of system
is admittedly out of date, but it's far from obsolete. A functioning system can take
one of several forms that would be
useful to me:
a) A functioning 'max-config' 6085 (pref a 6085-2 or a Fuji Xerox model)
workstation with a live hard drive. monitor,
kbd, and mouse. All the bells and whistles so to speak.
b) A complete copy of the GlobalView install media for either WinTel (win32) or
Solaris/Sparc.
I'd also need a complete set of product factoring numbers (software license keys) for
the Xerox software.
The above will make 'perfect sense' to many of your readers, I hope that one of
them will actually be able to help me out.
Considering how influential the Xerox STAR and it's follow-ons were, you'd think
that someone, or some company somewhere
would be able to help. Or that there would be archival information and possibly materials
available from Xerox.
Wrong.
After exchanging a number of e-mails with current and former Xerox employees, it has
become clear to me that Xerox would
rather pretend that they didn't "Fumble the Future" and let the Personal
Computer revolution slip away from them. Even
archives you might normally expect to see at PARC were purged. There are several ex-Xerox
employee groups trying to
establish a functioning set of workstations and software at museums, but materials,
hardware, and software are almost
non-existant. And those few who have operable systems are loath to let anyone near to them
knowing full well that
replacement parts are not to be had.
As far as I'm able to deduce, Xerox has (nearly successfully) tried to bury all memory
of the STAR. When Xerox
'converted' to MS based networking and commodity-priced personal computers, those
"ahead of their time" workstations and
software were rather abruptly (one correspondant used the word forcibly) removed from user
and engineering desktops and
then physically destroyed. Not even put up for employee or surplus sale. Simply
Destroyed.
Market forces take some of the blame for this as did the need for Xerox to join the late
20th Century. But simple
pig-headness on the part of EDS (a contractor to Xerox) and a no-longer-there CIO helpd to
kill off the memory and
archives of a most remarkable design and software product.
Well, rather than (further) rehash the sad, sorry story of Xerox, STAR, the Alto, 8010,
1186, 6085, ViewPoint, and
GlobalView, I'll just hope that one of your readers or their company will be able to
help me out.
Thanks, take it easy, good luck in Hollywood, and keep working on Jannisaries and The
Burning Tower.
All the best
Chuck Kuhlman ckuhlman at
mn.rr.com ckuhlman at
uswest.net