8-bitters and multi-whatever
Rod Smallwood
RodSmallwood at mail.ediconsulting.co.uk
Thu Sep 13 01:06:42 CDT 2007
I worked at DEC in '82 at the UK HQ (Decpark)
I'm sure we had more than 50 nodes in the UK alone.
The SET HOST list went on forever.
Rod Smallwood
-----Original Message-----
From: cctech-bounces at classiccmp.org [mailto:cctech-bounces at classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Roy J. Tellason
Sent: 12 September 2007 20:46
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
Subject: Re: 8-bitters and multi-whatever
On Wednesday 12 September 2007 15:08, Sridhar Ayengar wrote:
> Roy J. Tellason wrote:
> >>> I know of ARCnet, went to a short seminar on that once at a trade
> >>> show, and in fact even have a couple of ISA cards around here
> >>> someplace, though I don't forsee me ever using them.
> >>
> >> ARCnet and most of the 'nets were in the price range of a hard disk
> >> then. Also the whole idea of networking was new. For example in
> >> 1982 the two largest networks I knew of were DEC (internal) and
> >> Dupont(internal) and they were around 50 nodes!
> >
> > I remember those days, thinking of 50 nodes as being pretty good-sized.
> > :-)
>
> IBM's internal network was significantly larger than that by '82. 8-)
Of that I have no doubt! :-)
--
Member of the toughest, meanest, deadliest, most unrelenting -- and ablest -- form of life in this section of space, a critter that can be killed but can't be tamed. --Robert A. Heinlein, "The Puppet Masters"
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Information is more dangerous than cannon to a society ruled by lies. --James M Dakin
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