Difference between revisions of "MagicSix"
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("Mockapetris and Gregory's Interactive Computer") |
(→Timeline: Magic 1.0 - 1969 or 70.) |
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== Timeline == | == Timeline == | ||
+ | * "Magic 1.0 allowed basically a user per machine with a shared fail system." "I believe this was the summer of 69 or maybe 70." | ||
* In 1973, "a couple of model 5's and a model 3". | * In 1973, "a couple of model 5's and a model 3". | ||
* "we soon thereafter got an (amazing to me) model 70." | * "we soon thereafter got an (amazing to me) model 70." |
Revision as of 14:01, 10 November 2018
MagicSix was an operating system similar to Multics, developed at the MIT Architecture Machine Group for Interdata/Perkin-Elmer 32-bit machines. The name means "Mockapetris and Gregory's Interactive Computer".
It hosted a LISP dialect called MagixSixLisp, in which the graphics software ASAS was first written.
It also hosted SINE ("SINE is not EINE"), perhaps the second Emacs clone after EINE.
CHAOSnet was the only networking option.
Timeline
- "Magic 1.0 allowed basically a user per machine with a shared fail system." "I believe this was the summer of 69 or maybe 70."
- In 1973, "a couple of model 5's and a model 3".
- "we soon thereafter got an (amazing to me) model 70."
- "Later we got a Model 85".
- "By 1976 we had a couple of 7/32's".
- 1977, SINE and TVMacs.
- 1979, Aspen Movie Map.
- In the 80s, host tables show some PerkinElmer 3230 machines.