Are you sure?

The B20, B21, B22 looked like this - http://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/102662660 - and nothing like the 3B1 or the S/50. The B25 and subsequent models (which are often referred to as B20s) are modular systems that are box-shaped and got wider as "slices" were added. The B20s were x86-based and the 3B1 (and presumably the CT S/50) was 68k-based.

alan


On 1/17/18 2:41 AM, Dominique Carlier via cctech wrote:
It's interesting, I had exactly the same machine a long time ago, but with a different label. It was a Burroughs B20 distributed by Unisys

Dominique

On 17/01/2018 06:45, AJ Palmgren via cctalk wrote:
Did it happen to be one of these older-style Convergent AWS machines?

http://mightyframe.blogspot.com/2017/03/convergent-technologies-workstation.html



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