Unix tools, Bill Webb, UBC, TRIUMF
Boris Gimbarzevsky
boris at summitclinic.com
Sun Mar 10 00:22:19 CST 2019
I used to work at UBC in Pharmacology in the
1980's and had a few talks with Bill Webb about
Unix but, unfortunately, for the data acquisition
we were doing Unix was far too slow and I did
everything in optimized PDP-11 assembler. Of
course, we didn't have a PDP-11/45 like Bill had
and had to make do with a slower PDP-11/34. Bill
had hacked Unix considerably and it was locally
known as Webbix on campus. Played around with
Unix and Webbix back then but don't think I have the tapes anymore.
One of the RL01 or RLO2 disks I picked up at SERF
in the 1990's (along with a MINC system)
contained a copy of Webbix but I'm not sure I
copied it. Gave away the MINC and 2 RLO1 or RLO2
drives to a guy in Seattle about 2006 and hopefully he's copied them.
Boris Gimbarzevsky
>I recovered several pieces of Unix media all
>of whichh I think made it into TUHS/PUPS
>collection - at UBC in the mid-1990âs while I was working at TRIUMF.
>
>Those Unix disks and tapes came from a SERF sale
>(Surplus Equipment Recycling Facility) on UBC
>main campus, not from TRIUMF. Bill Webb was a
>common thread for Unix use in the biology department at UBC.
>
>TRIUMF extensively used Data General Nova, then
>Eclipse (both 16 and 32 bit), computers from
>opening through the 1990âs for both cyclotron
>control systems and data acquisition for
>experiments. They also had a fair number of
>PDP-11âs and VAXen running RSX-11, RT-11, and
>VMS. I myself had an Alpha workstation on my
>desk for the two users I was at TRIUMF.
>
>One of my favorite connections between TRIUMF
>and UBC, was the underground pneumatic tube used
>to rapidly carry short lived isotopes produced
>in the cyclotron to the main campus for biology
>and medical uses. It should not come as a
>surprise to anyone that I still work in moving
>things and people through underground tunnels ð
>
>Tim N3QE
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