On Friday 23 June 2006 8:59 am, Ted Roche wrote: > There's a reason why WANG and DEC and Basic/4 and DG had a major > presence here, and that hasn't changed with the rise and fall of > Silicon Valley. Wang, DEC, DG, ComputerVision, Prime and a few others were headquartered in Ma. with DEC being Massachusetts largest employer for a short time. The industry changed. The technology shift was toward microprocessors. Wang missed the boat because they failed to realize that shrink-wrap software was the future, and at one time, Wang owned the word processing market. DEC failed to capitalize on its own successes and ended up merging with Compaq then HP. For the most part, all of the systems I mentioned above made mid-range or specialized systems. Many of these were obsoleted by either PCs or microprocessor-based stuff. DEC was never able to push the Alpha into the mainstream market, although they owned the HPTC market. -- Jerry Feldman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Boston Linux and Unix user group http://www.blu.org PGP key id:C5061EA9 PGP Key fingerprint:053C 73EC 3AC1 5C44 3E14 9245 FB00 3ED5 C506 1EA9
_______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss