On Sun, 17 Jul 2016, [email protected] wrote:

In the mid 80s our Uni teaching 11/780 running VMS would groan and creak
under the strain of 50 students logged on. I was told that over at Sydney
Uni, their 11/780s were running a very modded and tweaked Unix and could
have a hundred or more students logged in on the one machine. Whether it
was crashy or not, they got more bang-for-buck out of their VAXen.

You certainly got more bang when your disk crashed. I ran a VAX cluster with 15 years with shadowed DSSI drives and never had a disk corruption, I replaced members of shadow sets when they died but again I never had any issues of corruption and data loss. Meanwhile I also lived with an array of Ultrix boxes and SunOS boxes where I had to clean up disk corruptions or do restores from tape onto new disks - usually in the middle of the night. Your work is always done faster if you skip steps.

        "System unstable, save often."

--
  Richard Loken VE6BSV, Systems Programmer - VMS   : "...underneath those
  Athabasca University                             : tuques we wear, our
  Athabasca, Alberta Canada                        : heads are naked!"
  ** [email protected] **                         :    - Arthur Black

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