Atex, now Newscycle, also had a Classified Advertising system out at that time. I remember
reading a article somewhere saying that Atex was going to use the J11 for that system.
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 13, 2019, at 06:41, Toby Thain via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
On 2019-03-13 9:31 AM, Paul Koning via cctalk
wrote:
On Mar 12, 2019, at 10:10 PM, Fritz Mueller via
cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
Hmmm, are these the atex racks seen lurking in the background of that recent storage
space trawl down near Houston?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-DEC-PDP-11-34-Minicomputer-With-Kennedy-Ta…
Interesting. Atex is, or was at one time anyway, a manufacturer of typesetting systems
for newspapers. DEC was also in that business with Typeset-11 (TMS-11) but Atex was more
successful, certainly for smaller newspapers because it used less expensive PDP11 models.
Funny, I always associated it with big papers (I think the NYT used it?)
The "multi-processor bus" thing is
curious. And I wonder what the terminals are like. If they are typesetting terminals, I
think they support some sort of WYSIWYG editing setup -- that too was a competitive
advantage vs. the "mark-up" approach (sort of like Runoff on steroids) that
Typeset-11 offered. Looking at the keyboards would give a clue.
Pretty sure Atex was pre-wysiwyg. This article may provide some context
on that:
https://www.nytimes.com/1991/03/17/business/can-atex-keep-its-proprietary-p…
&
https://books.google.ca/books?id=IAGotP-IDocC&lpg=PA1827&ots=jEwR7s…
--Toby
The "11-34 minicomputer... J-11 CPU" description is a bit strange. Possibly a
dual CPU setup with one of each? But that seems strange because those two are from
different generations, and interfacing them together would be tricky and not all that
useful.
paul