[SCC_Active_Members] FYI: PDP Planet: Paul Allen's restored PDP-10son the net

Lee Courtney lcourtney at mvista.com
Mon Jun 6 06:26:15 PDT 2005


We do have a Toad-1 which Rich is using to run TOPS-20. It was donated to
the Museum last year along with archives of TOPS-10 and -20.

Restoration of this machine would entail the following steps:

1. plug in
2. turn on
3. boot

Lee Courtney

MontaVista Software
1237 East Arques Avenue
Sunnyvale, California 94085
(408) 328-9238	voice
(408) 328-9204	fax
Yahoo IM: charlesleecourtney

> -----Original Message-----
> From: scc_active-bounces at computerhistory.org
> [mailto:scc_active-bounces at computerhistory.org]On Behalf Of Paul McJones
> Sent: Friday, June 03, 2005 8:51 PM
> To: scc_active at computerhistory.org
> Subject: [SCC_Active_Members] FYI: PDP Planet: Paul Allen's restored
> PDP-10son the net
>
>
> Via the Multicians mailing list:
>
> Message: 1
>     Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2005 09:42:33 -0400
>     From: Tom Van Vleck <thvv at multicians.org>
> Subject: PDP-10 on the net
>
> Rich Alderson has restored one of Paul Allen's PDP-10s
> to working order and put it on the Internet running TOPS-10.
> The website
>
>     http://www.pdpplanet.com/
>
> is an inspiration. It shows how the job should be done
> and documented.
>
>
>
> ________________________________________________________________________
> ________________________________________________________________________
>
> Message: 2
>     Date: Thu, 02 Jun 2005 15:43:33 -0000
>     From: "Olin Sibert" <osibert at siliconkeep.com>
> Subject: Re: PDP-10 on the net
>
> --- In multicians at yahoogroups.com, Tom Van Vleck <thvv at m...> wrote:
>
>  >> Rich Alderson has restored one of Paul Allen's PDP-10s
>  >> to working order and put it on the Internet running TOPS-10.
>  >> The website
>  >>
>  >>    http://www.pdpplanet.com/
>  >>
>  >> is an inspiration. It shows how the job should be done
>  >> and documented.
>
>
> Indeed it is. Now if only we had one to restore, and a
> billionaire of our own to pay for the project.  The Museum's
> DPS-8 (formerly NSA's) has most of the essential parts, but
> disk drives would have be created somehow.
>
>
>
>
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