From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: jsteve@superglobalmegacorp.com (Jason Stevens) Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2017 21:15:58 +0800 Subject: [TUHS] RT/PC-centric AIX history In-Reply-To: <182b5cdae4f0ceb1673f6ea37a08d64e@xs4all.nl> References: <06D4621236AA4E76A87D603786775B68@studyvista> <9FF9A1E6-DEA5-4619-84AE-08811A070A03@superglobalmegacorp.com> <182b5cdae4f0ceb1673f6ea37a08d64e@xs4all.nl> Message-ID: <800A9915-E0E2-4D19-8067-8DCA6A52CCD4@superglobalmegacorp.com> Oops imps, fuzzballs then AOS... That reminds me I wish I had dumped Roms when I had access to a Cisco AGS.. That almost reminds me to ask about the whole "open" Stanford 68000 board that became the Cisco AGS, and SUN 100.. and I think SGi 1000 On March 10, 2017 9:13:06 PM GMT+08:00, Jacob Goense wrote: >On 2017-03-10 13:09, Jason Stevens wrote: >> 2nd, as it also appears that AOS was the router backbone of the >NSFNet >> once they started to migrate off of the IMPs > >You are mixing up starwars characters :-) >The AOS boxen replaced the Fuzzballs. -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: