For a while I have collected bits of legacy CAD, most recently Martin Hepperle 
sent me what I believe is the last version of Hank Christianson's MOVIE.BYU, a 
FORTRAN based 3D modeling and animation system.

I also have experimented with the original Berkley SPICE, also written in 
FORTRAN.


This weekend, I am reading "the Engineering Design Revolution", a 650 page 
history of the CAD industry by David Weisberg, who was there and worked for 
many of the companies in the beginning of the industry, I highly recommend this 
for anyone interested in CAD:


www.cadhistory.net<http://www.cadhistory.net>

The Engineering Design Revolution<http://www.cadhistory.net/>
www.cadhistory.net
The Engineering Design Revolution. The People, Companies and Computer Systems 
That Changed Forever the Practice of Engineering. By. David E. Weisberg



My question is, did any of the source code for these systems, Applicon, 
Auto-Trol, Calma, ComputerVision, thousands of lines of primarily FORTRAN ever 
make it out, where we could read and study this original body of mathematical 
geometry done on computers?


I know we are primarily a hardware group here, but where is the interest in the 
software discussed?


Randy



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