Newbie enquiries

From: Huw Davies <Huw.Davies_at_kerberos.davies.net.au>
Date: Fri Nov 22 00:43:00 2002

At 01:10 PM 22/11/2002 +1100, Kane, David (DPRS) wrote:

>The system comprised a CPU and dual 8" floppy in a half height rack, on
>top of which sat a marked sense card reader, and in the corner was a DEC
>line printer. My memory of the CPU front panel is that it looks somewhat
>like an 11/34 picture I found in the user manual PDF with the programmers
>console. But I definitely remember it as an "slash zero" something model,
>so I believe that it was an 04. However the only picture of an 04 I have
>found to date has a rather basic looking programmers panel, by basic I
>mean as it is simple white text on black panel and buttons. I seem to
>remember the octal keypad had a border drawn on the pane and was a little
>bit smarter looking, maybe there were updated cosmetic version of the
>panel. The system booted straight to a local derivative of FORTRAN (MONECS
>FORTRAN), so we were insulated from the hardware and I therefore have no
>memory or interface card details.

The MONECS system we had at La Trobe for many years was an 11/23 (maybe an
11/23+) although this was the prepackaged version from Digital known as the
DEAMON. For those of you outside of Australia:

MONECS - MONash (University) Educational Computing System
DEAMON - Digital Equipment Australia / MONash

Monash University developed a card based system where the user wrote code
(in FORTRAN, COBOL and ISTR a pseudo-assembler) and used pre-punched or
mark sense cards. You queued up to use the card reader, loaded your own job
and collected output almost immediately. I used the main frame based
(probably Burroughs) predecessor to lean to program FORTRAN in either 1969
or 1970. We used to send our cards by post to Monash and if we were lucky
would get one run a week....

Huw Davies | e-mail: Huw.Davies_at_kerberos.davies.net.au
                      | "If God had wanted soccer played in the
                      | air, the sky would be painted green"
Received on Fri Nov 22 2002 - 00:43:00 GMT

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