Difference between revisions of "Foonly"
From Computer History Wiki
					
										
					
					 (Foonex monitor, microcode, and working microcode assembler)  | 
				 (Added a section about peripherals, only the C1 channel for now.)  | 
				||
| Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
[[Image:F1.JPG|300px|rightt|thumb|The Foonly F-1]]  | [[Image:F1.JPG|300px|rightt|thumb|The Foonly F-1]]  | ||
| − | == Models ==  | + | == Computer Models ==  | 
The F-1 was an ECL adaptation of the original [[Superfoonly]] design.  It was built at [[III]] for use in a optical character recognition system.  It was bought by Omnibus for generating computer graphics.  | The F-1 was an ECL adaptation of the original [[Superfoonly]] design.  It was built at [[III]] for use in a optical character recognition system.  It was bought by Omnibus for generating computer graphics.  | ||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
The F-5 was another small machine.  | The F-5 was another small machine.  | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Peripherals ==  | ||
| + | |||
| + | * The '''Foonly C1''' was a disk [[channel]] for [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]] computers, compatible with [[International Business Machines|IBM]] drives.  | ||
== External links ==  | == External links ==  | ||
Revision as of 09:31, 29 May 2023
Company making PDP-10 clones.
They made their own operating system, FOONEX, for their machines. It was based on TENEX.
Computer Models
The F-1 was an ECL adaptation of the original Superfoonly design. It was built at III for use in a optical character recognition system. It was bought by Omnibus for generating computer graphics.
The F-2 was a small machine. Among other places, it was used at CCMRA (running WAITS) and Symbolics.
The F-3 and F-4 were popular with Tymshare, which built their own versions. Tymeshare's System 26KL was an update of the F-4 design with KL10 capabilities, intended to run Doug Englebart's Augment.
The F-5 was another small machine.
