Getting off topic but I have to chime in: The Tek 4010 vector storage scope 
family was very popular in the sciences and engineering through the end of the 
1980s. Way more common than the GT40 ever was. Tek4010 emulation lives on today!

Of course a storage scope is a very different beast if you were trying to play 
a video game.

The digital electronics in a Tek vector terminal was surprisingly simple and 
elegant.

Tim N3QE

> On Sep 3, 2018, at 1:37 PM, Al Kossow <a...@bitsavers.org> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On 9/3/18 10:29 AM, Timothe Litt wrote:
>> 
>> For most purposes, the GT40 was superseded by devices like the VT105 (VT100 
>> + b/w graphics), VT125, GiGi, & VT240.  But
>> those are all raster scan devices - which can't match the quality of a 
>> vector display.  And none of them had a lightpen.
> 
> In the vector world, the replacement was the (really expensive) VS-60, made 
> by Sanders.
> That competed with Vector General, E&S, and Megatek
> 
> There was also the weirdo VSV-11, a low-res raster display that talked VT-11 
> opcodes.
> 
> 
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