Difference between revisions of "IMP interface"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(+IMP11-B)
m (Avoid use of internal page tag)
Line 6: Line 6:
 
* MIT DM IMP, used by [[Incompatible Timesharing System|MIT-DM]]. Made by Bob Metcalfe
 
* MIT DM IMP, used by [[Incompatible Timesharing System|MIT-DM]]. Made by Bob Metcalfe
 
* MIT KA IMP, used by [[Incompatible Timesharing System|MIT-AI, -ML, and -MC]]
 
* MIT KA IMP, used by [[Incompatible Timesharing System|MIT-AI, -ML, and -MC]]
* [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]] AN-10, for the [[PDP-10#Busses|PDP-10 I/O bus]]  
+
* [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]] AN-10, for the [[PDP-10 I/O Bus]]  
 
* DEC CSS [[IMP11-A ARPANET interface|IMP11-A]], [[UNIBUS]]
 
* DEC CSS [[IMP11-A ARPANET interface|IMP11-A]], [[UNIBUS]]
 
* DEC CSS [[IMP11-B ARPANET Interface|IMP11-B]], UNIBUS
 
* DEC CSS [[IMP11-B ARPANET Interface|IMP11-B]], UNIBUS

Revision as of 15:05, 25 October 2022

An IMP interface is a device controller used on a host (i.e. on its bus) to attach them to systems which used the special 1822 communication interface (defined in BBN Report No. 1822); these included initially the IMPs of the ARPANET (hence the name), and later the PRUs of the Packet Radio Network‎.

Some of the most popular IMP interfaces were:

but there were many others (many being 'one-off' local creations).

External links