From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: ron@ronnatalie.com (Ron Natalie) Date: Fri, 23 Mar 2018 12:32:41 -0400 Subject: [TUHS] long lived programs In-Reply-To: References: <02ab01d3c2be$cf335920$6d9a0b60$@ronnatalie.com> Message-ID: <02c401d3c2c4$90fe9ba0$b2fbd2e0$@ronnatalie.com> ➢ Although simh is huge step in that direction ;) Yep, sometimes that's the easier solution. Remember the old Honeywell IMPs. BBN wanted to move forward, but all the code was in 516 emulators (having been ported over from the PDP-1, they should have realized that portability would be important). They built the C-30 to emulate the Honeywell. Of course, this isn't even accounting for the VAX emulating the PDP and the like. You do find some relics still running stuff. I remember seing a new computer being installed at some FAA facilities. It was some Apollo systems long after HP had pulled the plug on the DomainOS and the related hardware. I still remember a while when we were in the business of porting/selling MOTIF on a wide variety of platforms. One day, the reps from Stellar insisted they need their loaner machine back. This was a trade show unit and had an huge anvil shipping case. I packed it up and put it on our loading dock. The next day Stellar announced they were out of business. I didn't think anything about it for a couple of years when I went out to our loading dock and said "Is this stupid thing still here." They had never come for it. I then was called into our sales manager's office. Some guy needs a MOTIF for a Stellar. I chuckle. He goes "Yeah I know they're out of business." I tell him that today's his lucky day. I still have one. I uncrated the thing, wrote him out a tape, and packed it back up. Last I saw one of the CPU boards was hanging on the wall of our conference room as a decoration and another programmer and ripped out the Wyse PC the thing had in the top of it as a boot-up/maintenance processor to take home.