> On Jan 9, 2018, at 7:56 PM, Phil Budne via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
> wrote:
>    ...
>    DC44    TYPESET-10 front end (PDP-11) for PTR (PA611R), PTP (PA611P), CAT? 
> photocomposition machine (LPC11)

That takes me back a while... 6 channel paper tape equipment, for communicating 
with typesetting machinery of that era.

Which reminds me:

> ...(*) "A Network For 10s?" possibly based on a VERY early spec for
> DECnet.  It may have used link-state routing.  I don't think routing
> in DECnet appeared before Phase III; 

I don't know anything about ANF-10.  But while routing appeared in DECnet with 
phase 3, that was not the first time DEC did routing.  Earlier (late 1977, I 
think -- certainly by summer 1978), Typeset-11 did link state routing.  It had 
a primitive kind of cluster that operated by passing work around as files, via 
a proprietary protocol over DMC-11 links, with link state routing.  It was 
pretty transparent: terminals were connected to any of the nodes, and could 
edit work and pass it around (to other people or to processing components such 
as typesetting back ends) independent of the location of those other resources.

        paul


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