From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: grog@lemis.com (Greg Lehey) Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 09:06:55 +0530 Subject: Anyone know what a Masscomp 5400 (54S-01) is? In-Reply-To: <14472.36082.530024.331321@cley.com>; from tfb@cley.com on Fri, Jan 21, 2000 at 04:44:34PM +0000 References: <200001211607.LAA12512@uni02du.unity.ncsu.edu> <14472.36082.530024.331321@cley.com> Message-ID: <20000122090655.B455@mojave.worldwide.lemis.com> On Friday, 21 January 2000 at 16:44:34 +0000, Tim Bradshaw wrote: > * rdkeys wrote: >> On a surplus junket, today, I ran across a 2 dollar chassis that was >> listed as a Masscomp 5400 (54S-01) computer. It looked rather like >> a DECish based thing with dual height cards, like some sort of laboratory >> digital aquisition machine. On the long-shot that it is some sort of >> PDP-11ish thing, anyone have any recollection or pointers to any info >> on that kind of a Masscomp machine? > > Masscomps were 68k based machines, they had a whole bunch of stuff for > real-time and data-acquistion type stuff. They ran something called > RTU -- real-time Unix -- which was a weirdo sysv / BSD hybrid, not fun > to use. If the 5400 is the machine I remember it's a 68020 machine > but it may have a lot of cards for other stuff in. If it *is* the > machine we had it was deeply unreliable. Masscomp got bought by > someone else later on but I forget who, so they sometimes get badged > as some other make. > > I would run away, fast. On the other hand, IIRC this was the machine which was the basis for the Egan/Teixeira (sp?) book on writing UNIX drivers. It might be amusing for that reason alone. If it's functional and you have the space, you probably won't regret the $2 you spend for it. Greg -- Finger grog at lemis.com for PGP public key See complete headers for address and phone numbers