clive@pp.ACA.MCC.COM (Clive Dawson) (09/06/89)
[The number of people who contributed to the recent discussion on
Digital's 36-bit architecture made it seem appropriate to post this
message here. My apologies for straying from the main subject
matter.]
A special event will take place at the Fall DECUS Symposium in Anaheim,
California, November 6-10, 1989: The 25th Anniversary of 36-bit systems
will be celebrated. In 1964, Digital announced the PDP-6. Twenty-five
years later, the 36-bit architecture is still here serving a loyal
customer base.
The celebration will take place on the evening of Monday, November 6,
1989. The usual DEC 10/20 Update Session will be held from 3-5 PM.
Last-minute announcements regarding Anniversary events will be made at
this session, as well as in the Monday edition of Update.Daily (the
Symposium newspaper). A meeting room in one of the Symposium hotels
(Hilton or Marriott) will be made available for the anniversary
events, which include:
-- 36-Bit JEOPARDY!
In the tradition of the 36-bit Trivia Bowl held at the
20th Anniversary celebration, experts on the history
and folklore of 36-bit systems will compete against
each other. Come and match wits with them!
-- Memorabilia Exhibit and Swap
You are encouraged to bring old manuals, listings,
pieces of hardware (e.g. KA and/or KI consoles!),
posters, buttons, tapes, and any other items related
to 36-bit systems for exhibiting and/or swapping.
Table space will be made available.
-- Anniversary Dinner
Dinner plans are not yet firm. It will either be
catered by the hotel or we will adjourn to a nearby
restaurant.
-- 36-Bit Magic & War Stories
Following dinner we will swap war stories and other
legends of 36-bit lore. One of the most popular
events of the 1984 celebration will be repeated: a
reading of several infamous SPR's (and their equally
infamous replies.) Come prepared to share share your
favorite stories. Prizes for the best will be
awarded.
Note that these four events will NOT appear in the DECUS schedule
since they are not official DECUS functions (and therefore do not
require conference registration.) If you are planning to attend any
of the 25th Anniversary events, please notify me as soon as possible,
since we need to get a reasonable estimate on the number of people to
expect. (Dinner plans depend on this, so please try not to delay.)
E-mail: Internet: Clive@MCC.COM
UUCP: ...!cs.utexas.edu!pp!clive
U.S. mail: MCC, 3500 West Balcones Center, Austin, TX 78759
Phone: (512) 338-3430
This will also enable us to create a mailing list for any last minute
announcements regarding the events. If you would like table space for
exhibits, please mention this. Suggestions regarding dinner plans are
also welcome. It may be difficult to find a reasonable restaurant
nearby that could handle this. The 20th anniversary dinner was done
by the hotel at a cost of $36/person (what else?!). Is this a
reasonable fee? If not, let me know how much you would be willing to
pay.
This message is being sent to the TOPS-20 mailing list and the
comp.arch and comp.org.decus news groups. Please redistribute as you
see fit and pass the word to other 36-bitters who may not otherwise
find out about this.
See you in Anaheim!
Clive Dawsonbeyer@cbnewsh.ATT.COM (jean-david.beyer) (09/06/89)
Am I missing something. The PDP-6 and PDP-10 were not the first 36-bit machines. The IBM701 was 36bit data (instructions 18 bit, 2 per word), and the 704 of the mid '50's was 36bit word data and instructions. So we are past the 30 birthday of 36 bit machines. -- Jean-David Beyer AT&T Bell Laboratories Holmdel, New Jersey, 07733 attunix!beyer
lsheldon@cup.portal.com (Laurence Larry Sheldon) (09/07/89)
Must be talking about _DEC_ 36-bit machines. I pretty sure UNIVAC and probably 1BM and maybe others had 36-bit machines before 1959. Come to think of it USE is almost 35 years old, and it (besides being the oldest user-group on the planet) was formed around--what--1107's?
michaud@decvax.dec.com (Jeff Michaud) (09/08/89)
In article <3624@cbnewsh.ATT.COM>, beyer@cbnewsh.ATT.COM (jean-david.beyer) writes: > Am I missing something. The PDP-6 and PDP-10 were not the first > 36-bit machines. The IBM701 was 36bit data (instructions 18 bit, 2 per > word), and the 704 of the mid '50's was 36bit word data and instructions. > So we are past the 30 birthday of 36 bit machines. Yes, you are missing something, and that is that this newgroup is comp.org.decus :-) Why would a DECUS related event celebrate birthdays for IBM machines? :-) /--------------------------------------------------------------\ |Jeff Michaud michaud@decwrl.dec.com michaud@decvax.dec.com| |DECnet-ULTRIX #include <standard/disclaimer.h> | \--------------------------------------------------------------/
beyer@cbnewsh.ATT.COM (jean-david.beyer) (09/08/89)
In article <4564@shlump.nac.dec.com>, michaud@decvax.dec.com (Jeff Michaud) writes: > In article <3624@cbnewsh.ATT.COM>, beyer@cbnewsh.ATT.COM > (jean-david.beyer) writes: > > Am I missing something. The PDP-6 and PDP-10 were not the first > > 36-bit machines. The IBM701 was 36bit data (instructions 18 bit, 2 per > > word), and the 704 of the mid '50's was 36bit word data and instructions. > > So we are past the 30 birthday of 36 bit machines. > this newgroup is comp.org.decus :-) Why would a > DECUS related event celebrate birthdays for > IBM machines? :-) > I get it. On my machine, this newsgroup is called comp.arch, not comp.org. decus. Hence the confusion. Actually, were anyone wishing to celebrate an IBM machine, it sure would not be a recent one. THe last one I managed to like was a 7094. It is hard to like anything they did since, unless one is a stockholder. -- Jean-David Beyer AT&T Bell Laboratories Holmdel, New Jersey, 07733 attunix!beyer
jgd@csd4.csd.uwm.edu (John G Dobnick) (09/16/89)
From article <21951@cup.portal.com>, by lsheldon@cup.portal.com (Laurence Larry Sheldon): > Must be talking about _DEC_ 36-bit machines. I pretty sure UNIVAC and > probably 1BM and maybe others had 36-bit machines before 1959. > > Come to think of it USE is almost 35 years old, and it (besides being > the oldest user-group on the planet) was formed around--what--1107's? Actually, I think it was originally formed by 1103 users. Let me check my USE inc. history book here... Ah yes. Quoting from the official history text: "Since 1955, when 4 users of the Univac 1103 met to discuss stand- ares for programming and subroutines,..." -- John G Dobnick Computing Services Division @ University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee INTERNET: jgd@csd4.csd.uwm.edu UUCP: <backbone>!uwm.edu!csd4.csd.uwm.edu!jgd "Knowing how things work is the basis for appreciation, and is thus a source of civilized delight." -- William Safire