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From: Dan Cross <crossd@gmail.com>
To: Rob Pike <robpike@gmail.com>
Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society <tuhs@tuhs.org>
Subject: Re: [TUHS] Blit source
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2019 00:12:28 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <CAEoi9W65VT-+nXPQtt6iiEPoKtZdxNjnzgxwiW9_ODgJYzbUMw@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAKzdPgz37wwYfmHJ_7kZx_T=-zwNJ50PhS7r0kCpuf_F1mDkww@mail.gmail.com>

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On Wed, Dec 18, 2019 at 7:27 PM Rob Pike <robpike@gmail.com> wrote:

> [snip]
>
The sequence is thus Jerq, Blit, DMD-5620. DMD stood for dot-mapped rather
> than bit-mapped, but I never understood why. It seemed a category error to
> me.
>

The first time I saw a terminal of that lineage, it was a gnot (Gnot?
GNOT?) running Plan 9; this would likely have been 1993 or 1994; I was in
high school and visited a college-student friend of mine who was interning
at the labs and Dennis Ritchie had one on his desk. As an aside, he kindly
spared me a few minutes; I confess I was too star-struck and embarrassed to
ask him to autograph my copy of K&R that I had brought along. Dennis was a
kind, humble person and I was always quite struck by that in comparison to
some other academic and industry super-stars I've met.

Anyway, my question is what was the evolutionary story of the gnot? I
recall being told that it had a 68020, a datakit interface, and some amount
of RAM that was small but non-trivial; perhaps 4MB? It seemed clearly
evolved from the series of earlier terminals presently under discussion.

And the next step in the evolution was a MIPS-based terminal; I can't
recall the name, though.

        - Dan C.

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  parent reply	other threads:[~2019-12-19  5:13 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 22+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2019-12-19  0:16 Norman Wilson
2019-12-19  0:26 ` Rob Pike
2019-12-19  3:47   ` Mike Haertel
2019-12-19  6:49     ` Angelo Papenhoff
2019-12-19  5:12   ` Dan Cross [this message]
2019-12-19  6:54     ` Rob Pike
2019-12-19  8:03       ` arnold
2019-12-19 15:32       ` Chet Ramey
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2020-01-06 21:01 Norman Wilson
2019-12-19  9:09 Paul Ruizendaal
2019-12-15 20:45 Paul Ruizendaal
2019-12-15 21:17 ` Angelo Papenhoff
2019-12-16  6:25 ` emanuel stiebler
2019-12-16 11:06   ` Paul Ruizendaal
2019-12-17  6:04     ` emanuel stiebler
2019-12-18  3:53   ` Paul Ruizendaal
2019-12-18  4:30     ` Rob Pike
2019-12-18 10:43     ` Julius Schmidt
2019-12-18 12:11       ` Angelo Papenhoff
2019-12-18 15:53         ` Dan Cross
2019-12-18 12:19       ` Paul Ruizendaal
2019-12-19  0:20   ` Paul Ruizendaal

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