360/50 microcode listing
Ian S. King
isking at uw.edu
Thu May 7 16:29:26 CDT 2015
+1
I got a 360/20 "running" at LCM, but we didn't have the 2560 MFCM
reader/punch for which it was wired. Unlike other 360s, the /20 didn't use
the channel architecture - all peripheral interfaces were built into the
2020 box.
And the machine won't even process instructions without peripherals being
sensed. The printer and reader/punch are purely electromechanical, and all
electronics is in the interface, including such niceties as cover
interlocks and card-bin status. Every macro-instruction cycle, the
microcode checks for those things and would stall if they were not in
order.
I always wanted to emulate the MFCM, but there were always other
projects... and even with the ALDs, it was a sizeable challenge.
On Thu, May 7, 2015 at 12:15 PM, Chuck Guzis <cclist at sydex.com> wrote:
> On 05/07/2015 11:56 AM, Robert Ferguson wrote:
>
>> Is there a reliable estimate of the number of extant relatively complete
>> and/or actually working System/360 machines? A registry, perhaps?
>>
>> I would find that to be a very interesting data point.
>>
>
> I'd be interested also, in that a simple 360 CPU is essentially useless.
> You need at least a minimum collection of working peripherals to be able to
> do anything at all.
>
> --Chuck
>
>
>
--
Ian S. King, MSIS, MSCS, Ph.D. Candidate
The Information School <http://ischool.uw.edu>
Archivist, Voices From the Rwanda Tribunal <http://tribunalvoices.org>
Value Sensitive Design Research Lab <http://vsdesign.org>
University of Washington
There is an old Vulcan saying: "Only Nixon could go to China."
More information about the cctalk
mailing list