This is probably a PDP11/84 with the 8 misread as a 6. Probably RA81s or
newer drives on it. May also be in an HP rack or something, who knows.
-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org
[mailto:cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Johnny Billquist
Sent: Tuesday, September 05, 2006 2:43 AM
To: cctalk at
classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: [Fwd: Re: 11/64 conversion]
joe heck <trash3 at splab.cas.neu.edu> wrote:
Folks, I asked similar questions directly and got
the
following answers.
So, don't know if it is RT, RSX, or RSTS, or
even a
flavor of Unix.
Joe Heck
Hmm. Noone seem to ask the most obvious questions...
The original poster said it was a HP PDP 11/64.
Now, HP never made any computers with a PDP moniker, Digital did.
And Digital never made a PDP computer with the 11/64 designation.
I would suggest that we start at that end. What machine is
this *really*?
As for questions about transferring the data... Is the
machine still functional or not? If it is, then it would
obviously be easiest to just type the file out (it's a text
file after all).
Size of disks (someone asked). If we're talking MSCP disks,
the largest I know of is the RA73, which weights in at 2 GB.
(Unless you want to count SCSI drives...)
Copying to a Linux system? Sure you can do that, but I
wouldn't. VMS would probably be way better if it's actually
from some PDP system, since VMS can actually read some of the
file systems it might be in then.
But this might be something not at all related to DEC
equipment after all...
Johnny