It was basically a selectric on top of a box with little hooks. It pulled each key right? On Mon, May 8, 2023, 2:47 PM Clem Cole wrote: > Indeed -- and the sounds it made were distinct. Different from ASRxx or > 2741's > > For the younger crew, this made the light and >>so much quieter<< TI > Silent 700 of 10 years later such a marvel: > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_700 > ᐧ > > On Mon, May 8, 2023 at 12:12 PM ron minnich wrote: > >> ah, the flexowriter, for those who never saw it, was literally a >> typewriter with solenoids at the bottom. I owned one, it was a miracle to >> behold. >> >> >> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friden_Flexowriter#/media/File:Flexowriter_2201_Programatic.jpg >> >> On Mon, May 8, 2023 at 7:19 AM Douglas McIlroy < >> douglas.mcilroy@dartmouth.edu> wrote: >> >>> Although it dates from four years ago, MIT's obituary for Corbató was >>> still interesting to reread. It couldn't bring itself to mention >>> Unix--only the latecomer Linux. It also peddled some mythology about >>> Whirlwind from the decade before timesharing. >>> >>> "Whirlwind was ... a rather clunky machine. Researchers often had >>> trouble getting much work done on it, since they had to take turns >>> using it for half-hour chunks of time. (Corbató said that it had a >>> habit of crashing every 20 minutes or so.)" >>> >>> "Clunky" perhaps refers to Whirlwind's physical size. It occupied two >>> stories of the Barta Building, not counting the rotating AC/DC >>> motor-generators in the basement. But it was not ponderous; its clean >>> architecture prefigured "RISC" by two decades. >>> >>> Only a few favored people got "chunks" of (night) time on Whirlwind >>> for interactive use. In normal business hours it was run by dedicated >>> operators, who fed it user-submitted code on punched paper tape. >>> Turnaround time was often as short as an hour--including the >>> development of microfilm, the main output medium. Hardware crashes >>> were rare--much rarer than experience with vacuum-tube radios would >>> lead one to expect--thanks to "marginal testing", in which voltages >>> were ramped up and down once a day to smoke out failing tubes before >>> they could affect real computing. My recollection is that crashes >>> happened on a time scale of days, not minutes. >>> >>> "Clunky" would better describe the interface of the IBM 704, which >>> displaced Whirlwind in about 1956. How backward the 60-year-old >>> uppercase-only Hollerith card technology seemed, after the humane full >>> Flexowriter font we had enjoyed on Whirlwind. But the 704 had the >>> enormous advantages of native floating-point (almost all computing was >>> floating-point in those days) and FORTRAN. (Damn those capital >>> letters!) >>> >>> Doug >>> >>