Early timesharing/BBS systems

From: Hans B PUFAL <hansp_at_citem.org>
Date: Tue Jul 20 21:27:10 2004

Tom Jennings wrote:
> I'm not sure if more than one terminal at a time was supported, but
> likely the first long-distance remote terminal on an electrical
> calculator was the one on a Harvard Mark relay calculator. I think it
> was dry copper to Aiken's office or something, some miles away, to a
> teletype terminal. 1930's? 1940's?

 From the archives of the IEEE Computer magazine :

    It was particularly appropriate that time-sharing began at Dartmouth
    College. Twenty-four years earlier at Dartmouth, on September 11,
    1940, George Stibitz had first demonstrated remote computing. Using a
    Teletype connected via a telephone line to New York City, Stibitz was
    able to control the operation of his Complex Number Calculator at
    Bell Telephone Laboratories. Among those who used the system was
    logician Norbert Wiener.

http://www.computer.org/history/looking/r90006.htm

   -- HansP
Received on Tue Jul 20 2004 - 21:27:10 BST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Fri Oct 10 2014 - 23:36:51 BST