[Leica] Back ar work
Jim Nichols
jhnichols at lighttube.net
Sun Jun 26 16:00:51 PDT 2016
Thanks for the memories, Herb. My first encounter with a mini-computer
was, I believe, a PDP-8, a descendant of your original. It arrived as a
part of the fuel control system for a turbine engine test, and, when the
test ended, our Plant Engineering "hackers" looked for other
applications. We started with the two critical pressure measurements
needed for an accurate Mach number calculation during operation of the
16ft. Transonic Wind Tunnel. By using the ratio of static to total
pressure and the corrections determined during the wind tunnel
calibration, the PDP-8 gave us real-time Mach number, displayed on small
B&W TV monitors in front of the various operating personnel. Things
really developed from that small start.
Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA
On 6/26/2016 5:45 PM, Herbert Kanner wrote:
> My mail program went nuts last week. Twice I sent a rather long piece of mail describing the circumstances around a Gallery picture and each time the mail went into a black hole and the text had to be composed again. This time I'm being smarter and writing and saving it first in a word processor.
>
> OK. Don't remember what I last posted re health, but I was in the hospital for over a week with congestive heart failure. Made a rapid recovery as soon as I got home, and after a couple of weeks, returned to volunteer week at the Computer History Museum.
>
> As a consequence of the loss of the Babbage Difference Engine, I rejoined the group that gives twice monthly demonstrations of a working PDP1 computer (vintage 1960), the first “mini-computer”, in fact, the manufacturer (Digital Equipment Corporation) coined the term.
>
> The PDP1 is about the size of three household refrigerators. It's turned on at the throw of one switch. It sold for $120,000. In the year it came out, the manufacturer donated one to MIT. One professor permitted “hackers” access to it from midnight to morning. This was before “hackers” became a pejorative term. One of those hackers was Peter Samson, who figured out how to make the machine play four-part music, and our demo inclueds the opening of a Bach fugue. The other, Steve Russell, largely wrote the code for the world's first video game, Space War, which later became an arcade game.
>
> When I arrived at the Museum a week ago Saturday, I found the PDP1 team in the cafeteria area enjoing a post-lunch bull session. I just had to take a picture. We were all wearing our uniform red shirts. Note the guy on the right; that's Steve Russell.
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/herbk1/L1000005_001.jpg.html <http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/herbk1/L1000005_001.jpg.html>
>
> Please look “large”.
>
>
>
> Herbert Kanner
> kanner at acm.org
>
> Question Authority and the authorities will question you.
>
>
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