Xerox used the PDP11's to control their large data center printer's. 
The printers would take input from an mainframe over an i/o channel (parallel 
i/o bus that ran between i/o devices and was controlled by a special cpu that 
did i/o only and shared main memory with the main cpu's). And it could take 
input over an Ethernet card. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kevin Flanagan
Sent: Sunday, February 11, 2007 5:06 PM
To: Triangle Linux Users Group discussion list
Subject: Re: [TriLUG] Old Guy Stories

The desk mounting sounds like the PDPs as well.  I didn't work with them, but 
did see some in a DEC facility where I worked.  They had bit of a museum in the 
lobby, it was the "Benchmark Center", where customers and partners were brought 
in to run benchmarks on their production stuff.  This place had a block of the 
original "Whirlwind" as well.  
Last I knew (it's been a while) there were a bunch of PDPs still in use doing 
device control, one was the control for opening and closing the Cape Cod Canal 
drawbridge.  Back when they started making VAX clusters, they found a use for 
old PDP chips, storage controllers.  The thing called an HSC, Hierarchal 
Storage Controller, was a PDP11 on a card with I/O cards for disks, tapes and 
Cluster Interconnect.

Some of that design has advantages over stuff we do today for shared storage.


Kevin


Paul Jones wrote:
> about pdp's 
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PDP-8
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PDP-11
>
> both fit your word sizes and the paper tape and my memory. check out the 
> pictures and write ups
>
> ==========================================================================
>                              Paul Jones
>  "Work as if you live in the early days of a better nation." Alasdair Gray
>                 http://www.ibiblio.org/pjones/blog/
>   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   voice: (919) 962-7600     fax: (919) 962-8071
> ===========================================================================
>   
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