On 21 Dec 2012, at 03:59, Jordi Guillaumes i Pons <jg at jordi.guillaumes.name>
wrote:
El 21/12/2012, a les 4:42, Dave McGuire <mcguire at neurotica.com> va escriure:
While you're at it, DECnet/DOS was really nice for the time. I
believe (but am not certain, can anyone clarify?) that it is what grew
into Pathworks.
We used it extensively in our network back at the early 90's. IIRC the name evolution
was DECnet/DOS => PCSA => PATHWORKS. The main problem with the DOS version was it
ate a lot of "real" memory (about 300KB if my memory does not betray me). That
left a very small space for applications...
On the nice side, it came with an EDT compatible editor (SEDT... I miss it :)) and a
XServer for DOS which worked nicely with DECWindows. That was the reason the puck mouse
interface was in the LAN card.
Ooooooh! EDT-compatible DOS editor! I might like that more than
EDIT.COM ;)
We had a DEC-centric office system back in those days. ALL-IN-1 running in the VAXen and
WPS-DOS running in the peecees for word processing (BTW, does anyone have a WPS-DOS disk
set arount? ;)). 20/20 for spreadsheet at both sides. And TEAMDATA to allow the end users
to browse the databases. We bought 3300s for the remote offices. 3 of them I think. We
linked those to our main site using 1200bps point-to-point lines with DECRouters at each
side (1 port models at the remote end, a 4 port one at our central office). One of those
3300s ended at my home, and is now called BITXO2 :).
DEC made an 8-bit ISA Ethernet card, that also (inexplicably) had a
port on it for one of the DEC "puck" mice.
Yes, the DEPCA!
Jordi Guillaumes i Pons
jg at jordi.guillaumes.name
HECnet: BITXOV::JGUILLAUMES