Chapter 4 – 1959 to 1969
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Transcript Chapter 4 – 1959 to 1969
Chapter 4 – 1959 to 1969
From Mainframe to
Minicomputer
Russian Sputnik Satellite 1957
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State of Computing – 1960’s
note: driving forces – pg. 110
Great Demand for Computing
IRS: Mainframe + Punch Cards
JFK: 1961 Moon Challenge
Great economic growth & prosperity
New computers – the MINI
Technology already obsolete
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IBM
1960
70% Market Share stability
Research Labs (US, Europe)-slow payoff
Could control market, releases (usually)
Philco – transistor production
Others need to find area unserved by
IBM
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Government Influence
IBM 7000
Dept. of Defense - needed
computer technology
Researchers began
defining work
Demand for computing was heavy
Govt. had funding – to lots of places
See how this influenced the development
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Massachusetts Blue Cross
1960 - IBM 7070; 1401 for I/O
6 months- transferred 2,500,000 records
from cards to tape (150 file cabinets)
AUTOCODER (not FORTRAN or COBOL)
1965 Medicare established
Won job of administering for Mass.
Fall 1966 - fully computerized - 1st state
Also rented another 7070 (drove cards daily)
1969 - 3 IBM System /360’s +
COBOL, 24-7
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NASA- Ames Research Center
Mountain View, California, 1940
Soviet Sputnik 1957 & JFK Moon Challenge
Honeywell H-800 for wind tunnel - real time
+ others for dedicated purposes
Became part of NASA in 1958
DEC, Scientific Data Systems, EAI, IBM
Demands on central computer grew 100%
per year in 1960’s
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NASA-Ames Research
Center (cont.)
Direct Couple System - 1963
7094, 7040 (I/O), 7740 (Remote Terminals)
Replaced in 1968 with System 360 model 50
1969- System/360 model 67
For time-sharing, not a success
1971 –connection to new ARPANet
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NASA-Ames Research Center
(cont.)
Timesharing not a success
Design problems
Incompatible work patterns
No longer “real time” for wind tunnel
Table 4.1 p. 118 – computers at Ames
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IRS- Internal
Revenue Service
During WWII – need $
Taxpayers from 8 to 60
million
Withholding
Punch Card – 1948
IBM 650 - 1955
Kansas City regional
center
1.1 million returns – test
1959 - authorized to
computerize fully
IBM won bid
1401 @ each regional
center
7070 national center
Still 400 million cards
a year
Changeover complete by
1967: cards to magnetic
drum
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IRS
(continued)
Honeywell H200
No NW – flew tapes/cards around
TAS - Tax Administration System
Late 1960’s – implement new ideas
$650- $800 million
Distributing computing to 10 centers
Direct access via 8,000 terminals
Network
Lot of work in to security plans
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TAS (continued)
1974 - Nixon resignation / IRS records
Public questioned security
1977- Computerworld – GAO report
“Proposed IRS system may pose threat to
privacy”
Congress held hearings – IRS no trusted
Jan. 1978 - IRS dropped TAS
1985 - IRS system collapsed, bad press
Congress approved change
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Put a Man on the Moon
Batch would just not work
Needed lots of money for real-time
Mercury Monitor (system software)
Data could interrupt processor to note lifethreatening situations
Trap processor: checked levels of priority;
saved contents of registers
Evolved to real-time version of System/ 360
O.S. a significant advance in system software12
Minicomputer
New, Not a competitor to mainframe
Driven by technology
Factors defining Mini
Architecture
Packaging
Third parties
Price
Financing
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Architecture of Mini
Short Word
Implications
Small addresses, values, instructions
Instructions more complex
Instruction “modes”
With new transistors, processor still
simple inexpensive and fast
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First Mini at CDC
1957 - CDC (Jack Norris) developed 1604
Seymour Cray – CDC 160
1960 – CDC Model 1604
Designed model 160 for I/O
Word = 12 bits
8,000 word memory
Fast clock
160A sold for $60,000 (stand alone)
1963- Jack Scanllin, Scanllin Electronics
2-160A’s to provide online stock quotes to
brokers
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Digital Equipment Corp (DEC)
Founded 1957; K. Olsen, H. Anderson
Olsen: MIT Whirlwind;
MIT’s TX-0 (transistors)
1957-Most advanced in world
1959 - PDP-1
designer Ben Gurley
Designed to take full advantage of transistors
(not a “re-fit”)
100,000 adds/sec; 4,000-6,000 8-bit words
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PDP- 1 features
Transistors
DMA: defined mini architecture
Interrupts: up to 16 levels
circuits to handle in order
1 IBM channel cost more than PDP-1: $120K
Sold about 50, only moderate success financially, but
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very innovative.
No I/O channels (with own memory)
Fast, little effect on 1717processor
Cheap and simple
DEC’s Policies
Customer Relations Contrast to IBM
Sold Computers
Encouraged customer modifications
Had sophisticated customers
Necessary - small company
Manuals
“A Sears- Roebuck catalog” for DEC products
Sold cheap or gave away
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PDP-8 -1965
Sold 50,000;
12-bit word
Germanium transistors - faster
Indirect addressing; Paged memory; innovations
DECtape – portable, r/w both directions, like disk
Price??? $18,000; down to $10,000
plus single–chip versions
Very low; shocked industry
Model 33 ASR - Teletype Corp.
Used ASCII, ctrl & esc Keys (Photo Pg. 134)
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PDP-8 (cont’d)
Term: Minicomputer
Tendency toward assembly language
OEM – original equipment mfg.
Added specialized equipment
Early use LS-8 (by Electronics Diversified)
Contained a PDP-8A
Controlled lights for A Chorus Line
PDP-8 on a potato picker (P. 136)
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DEC Culture
The Mill, Maynard, Mass.
1965- $15 mil. Revenues
1970 - $135 mil.
Proud of differences – IBM
Eventually competed with IBM - VAX
Read P. 136-139
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Chapter 4 – 1959 to 1969
From Mainframe to
Minicomputer
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