G'day Zane -
I have placed Desktop Generation information for you at:
www.NovasAreForever.org/tmp/014-000751-00__The_Desktop_Generation__1983-Jul…
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Bruce Ray
Wild Hare Computer Systems, Inc.
Boulder, Colorado USA
bkr at
WildHareComputers.com
...preserving the Data General legacy:
www.NovasAreForever.org
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Bruce Ray
Wild Hare Computer Systems, Inc.
Boulder, Colorado USA
bkr at
WildHareComputers.com
...preserving the Data General legacy:
www.NovasAreForever.org
On 5/20/2018 6:37 PM, Zane Healy via cctalk wrote:
On May 20, 2018, at 5:16 PM, Bruce Ray via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
G'day Ed -
That picture was taken from our web site - specifically a photo of a Data General Desktop
Generation Model 10 beside a (1983) newsletter announcing the DG/10's introduction.
The computer system was announced in 1983 in DG's effort to blunt the effect of the
"microcomputer revolution" on Data General's proprietary systems' sales.
It was based on a 16-bit microEclipse processor contained in a small, modular,
consumer-oriented (desktop) form factor that ran DG operating systems and software.
However, one version also contained an Intel 8086 co-processor that could run newfangled
MS-DOS software, thereby targeting the pesky, soon-to-die microcomputer market. ;-)
The system was designed around modules that could be plugged together which simplified
system configuration and expansion. It was very reliable (except for some of the OEM disk
drives used) but disk and tape operations were very slow due to its serial I/O data bus
design.
The Desktop Generation series was very popular with many DG users and OEMs worldwide but
was overshadowed by the factors that affected the traditional minicomputer manufacturers
in the mid-1980s.
And "yes", information does exist for these systems. Do you have pictures of
your system?
Bruce
It sounds like a fascinating hardware design, and pretty much one I?ve long dreamed of.
It?s interesting to know that DG made such a system. Are any manuals for it online?
Zane