Yes, LEO was #1000. :-)
   Johnny
On 2023-03-09 02:32, Brian Roth wrote:
  Wow, very cool. I was just looking at my Directory of
computer networks 
 at lunch the other day and scanning over the SPAN network from 1990.Its 
 hard to believe just 30 years ago there was a worldwide DECnet network 
 with over 17,000 computers, real machines doing real work. Its pretty 
 cool to actually see in detail every machine type on SPAN (almost 
 entirely DEC) , machine names, VMS version and even phone numbers. BTW 
 was my machine LEO the 1000th?
 
 
 On Wednesday, March 8, 2023 at 03:47:26 PM EST, Johnny Billquist 
 <bqt(a)softjar.se> wrote:
 
 
 I have been planning for a long time to post a small reflection when I
 reached 1000 nodes registered in the hecnet nodename database.
 
 This happened tonight. I think it is a pretty cool thing. There are now
 1000 nodenames registered in this small hobby DECnet. I guess you could
 say it's actually not that small.
 
 However, I know that rather few machines are actually online, and it
 might even be that the majority of nodes registered have never been
 online. My guess is that maybe 5% of the registered machines are usually
 online. But I do not have any hard data to back this up.
 
 HECnet started out about 20 years ago from a desire I had to hook up a
 PDP-11 I had at home, to some machines at my university, using DECnet.
 At the time, I didn't have any TCP/IP for RSX, and the only way to get
 any kind of networking was to try and come up with some way of getting
 DECnet up.
 
 My first implementation basically just forwarded a serial port
 communication between two Unix machines. And on each end I then hooked
 that serial port into a PDP-11 running RSX, and used DDCMP for the
 actual DECnet link.
 
 This worked, but was obviously not that fast, as the serial ports were
 limited to 9600 bps.
 
 After a year or so, I figured I could instead write a small program that
 would forward ethernet packets. Using UDP I basically had the same
 property as a local ethernet, but it could be located somewhere pretty
 far away. From a DECnet point of view, it would appear as if they were
 on the same ethernet segment, while in reality they were nowhere near.
 As DECnet have pretty long timeouts on things, it turned out this worked
 without a hitch, and I could achieve much better throughput.
 
 Not long after that, the first other users were hooked up to HECnet as
 well. This was maybe around 2003 or so.
 
 Another data point is that there are 113 different persons that have one
 or more nodenames registered.
 
 Happy milestone, everyone, and thanks for being around.
 
    Johnny
 
 -- 
 Johnny Billquist                 || "I'm on a bus
                                    ||  on a psychedelic trip
 email: bqt(a)softjar.se <mailto:bqt@softjar.se>           ||  Reading 
 murder books
 pdp is alive!                    ||  tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol
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-- 
Johnny Billquist                  || "I'm on a bus
                                   ||  on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt(a)softjar.se             ||  Reading murder books
pdp is alive!                     ||  tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol