NEP.FOUTS@ames-vmsb.ARPA (05/12/84)
It hasn't been all that long since there were flashing lights and front panels. My first PDP 11/70 was delivered with the standard front panel, which included the lights. Each of the operating systems that it ran from time to time (Unix V6, RSTS/E, RSX11-M and RT11) each had been hacked so that their idle loops played patterns on the panel. Not only could you tell how busy the machine was by looking at the speed of the loop, but you could tell which OS was up by the type of pattern it was generating. Most of the local staff suffered from severe withdrawl when DEC put the RDC panel in and took the lights out. Several months later, I was working in the machine room for several hours when one of the programmers came by and asked when the 11/70 would be back up. Turns out it had been down the entire time I was there, but I was hacking another machine and never noticed. Too bad we can't get the human engineering boys to give us the lights back. (Can you say "grep"? I knew you could!) ------
grt@hocda.UUCP (G.TOMASEVICH) (05/16/84)
We still have those on our PDP-11/45 and PDP-11/40. Maybe someone could rig up a DR11-C with LED's on the output bits, then run some daemon to flash the lights. One could even add sense switches to the input bits. George Tomasevich
dave@utcsrgv.UUCP (Dave Sherman) (05/17/84)
Not only does CSRG at U of Toronto still have its 11/45 with flashing lights on the front panel (anyone remember dork(I)?), but it's still running version 6! (It's a long story.) It's on its last legs (drives?) though, and will soon be gone. A pity - it was the first UNIX machine at U of T, away back in 1975. Dave Sherman Toronto -- dave at Toronto (CSnet) {allegra,cornell,decvax,ihnp4,linus,utzoo}!utcsrgv!dave