On Fri, May 17, 2013 at 2:57 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
Well, in all honesty. We did just cover network booted PDP-11s. Not to mention that
PDP-11s could boot from tape pretty much from day 1.
Yep - but it was a different target customer originally. The 11 was the take over the
laboratory systems that the 8 had. And many of those systems did not have rotating
storage in them. Cassette tape was not unheard of (and the PDP-11's could boot from
cassette tape).
The Vax was envisioned as a system that could move into the same class of customer and
(use) as the 10 (and this start the 36/32 bit war). But both vax and 10's were
supposed to the computing hub. As I have said before, the 750 was a part of that war
between LDP (laboratory data products) enterprise folks. It's a big reason why
Masscomp was formed. Dave Cane used to say that the MC-500 was the computer he had
always wanted the 750 to be.
That said, you're right, at some point -- network boot because de rigor but I
>>think<< that was all post BI systems and long after I was tracking the vax
closely.