PARI as it's now known in Rosman still has the removable floor panels. I was trying to get my wife to volunteer for the summer camps so I could get a bit more access than the tour provided lol.I worked in NASA STDN 1968 to 1972 every computer we had was one of a kind.
I remember when or communication center was up graded from a small kitchen size room with racks of equipment and ended up with just 2 small cabinets.
The only time we interfaced with Manned Flight was President Nixon talking to the astronauts on the moon voice came through our equipment in Rosman, NC.
Digital Equipment went out in the 90s / early 2000s
Compaq acquired DEC in 1998.IIRC digital was bought by compaq which was then bought by HP
If you're going to name software, I'd put Netscape at the top of most "where'd they go?" lists, but also it's predecessor, NCSA Mosaic. Heck, we could put the whole Gopher Space protocol up there, as the predecessor of the WWW.Perfect Writer and Perfect Software
Novell Networks
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AOL, now a subsidiary of Yahoo
First, they did crash, but yeah... not too often. Two reasons:Why is it my Apple//e has never crashed and still works perfect nearly 45 years later but drives seem to last only a few years?
Windows NT was the first true multitasking Microsoft OS, released July 27, 1993. Windows 95 was released July 14, 1995. OS7 was released May 13, 1991.If you're going to name software, I'd put Netscape at the top of most "where'd they go?" lists, but also it's predecessor, NCSA Mosaic. Heck, we could put the whole Gopher Space protocol up there, as the predecessor of the WWW.
Then there's the long list of popular search engines that came and went, like Webcrawler and Ask Jeeves.
First, they did crash, but yeah... not too often. Two reasons:
1. It was a deterministic operating system, meaning it was extremely easy for the coders to replicate and then fix crash scenarios. Once OS's went non-deterministic, that all changed, but we gained the ability for true multi-tasking.
2. Closed-source hardware and OS. Apple controlled it all, no third-party stuff. Again, made it very easy to control both quality and to debug problem scenarios.
Speaking of deterministic versus non-deterministic OS's, which was first? I had Mac OS7 and then Win95, and it always felt like Win95 was really a rip-off of the OS7 workflow and appearance. But I think Win95 was actually the first non-deterministic operating system with true multitasking, not to mention first to PnP.
I don't think that's correct. Yes, NT 3.1 came out in 1993, but it was not true multitasking, it was an early form of re-entrant multitasking. Essentially, you could switch between applications, but the one you switched away from had to stop running, it would not continue solving a large simulation problem while you toggled over to MS Word to type a document.Windows NT was the first true multitasking Microsoft OS, released July 27, 1993. Windows 95 was released July 14, 1995. OS7 was released May 13, 1991.
I remember the Olivetti typewriter, but not the computer.I had an internship with Unisys in 1994, oh and whom doesn't remember the Italian Computer company Olivetti. They were famous for their wired patches of leads of their PCB's on their computer system.
A well rounded model, firm yet supple!Wait - you have a model T&A? That sounds ...interesting...
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