LINC

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The LINC (Laboratory INstrument Computer) was an early small computer (considered by many to be the first minicomputer), designed for use in laboratory environments (initially in biomedical research), and a distant descendent of the Whirlwind computer. The goal was to provide a computer for exclusive use by a single user; it is thus considered by many to be an important forerunner to the personal computer.

It provided real-time capabilities, along with analog input, a small video display screen, and a pair of small magnetic tape drives called LINC tapes (the latter being an integral part of the machine, not an optional peripheral). It was a 12-bit computer, built out of DEC System Building Blocks. The initial version had only 1024 words of core memory; it was later expanded to 2048 words.

History

It was designed starting in 1960 by Wesley A. Clark (who conceived of the basic concept of the machine); he had considerable design assistance from Charles Molnar. The prototype first ran in March of 1962; the first batch of machines were completed in a workshop for their eventual users held in the summer of 1963.

The project started at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory, then moved to MIT itself in January 1963 (because a switch to funding from NIH didn't interact well with Lincoln Labs' Air Force funding); after a big political fight at MIT over control, the project moved out to Washington University in St. Louis in the summer of 1964.

It was originally named the Linc, from the project's origins, but was re-named to 'LINC'.

It became a product for DEC, which sold both the original, and several descendants: the LINC-8, and later its replacement, the PDP-12.

Spear, Inc made the μ-LINC 1 and micro-LINC 300.

Artronix made the PC-12, a LINC with 4K memory and an "origin register" for address relocation.

Models

Year Manufacturer Model Memory Instruction cycle time
1963 Lincoln Labs LINC 1K 8 μs
1965 MIT LINC 2K 8 μs
1965 Spear μ-LINC 1 4K 8 μs
1968 Spear micro-LINC 300 32K 1 μs
1966 DEC LINC-8 4K 1.5 μs
1969 DEC PDP-12 4K (expandable to 32K) 1.2 μs
1972 Artronix PC-1200
1975 Artronix PC-12/710 8K
1975 Artronix PC-12/730 16K
1975 Artronix PC-12/750 32K
1975 Artronix PC-12/770 48K
1975 Artronix PC-12/790 64K

Further reading

External links