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Date:      Fri, 11 Mar 2005 19:57:29 -0700
From:      Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC <chad@shire.net>
To:        Gary Kline <kline@tao.thought.org>
Cc:        List Free Bsd <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: no flames, please.
Message-ID:  <986dbb6efb36c192a51097af979a13f4@shire.net>
In-Reply-To: <20050312022456.GB48560@thought.org>
References:  <20050311222646.GC47688@thought.org> <E1D9swf-0004t8-00@pop-a065c28.pas.sa.earthlink.net> <20050312005916.GA48346@thought.org> <28eca570565e9cde9336705620865291@shire.net> <20050312022456.GB48560@thought.org>

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On Mar 11, 2005, at 7:24 PM, Gary Kline wrote:

> On Fri, Mar 11, 2005 at 06:24:10PM -0700, Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC 
> wrote:
>>
>> On Mar 11, 2005, at 5:59 PM, Gary Kline wrote:
>>>
>>> 	PS:  When did DEC ever have a PeeCee?  I remember their
>>> 	11/* machines fondly; the next thing I knew they got
>>> 	bought out by a PC firm.
>>>
>>
>> DEC had lots of PCs.  Desktops, laptops. etc.  Even SAMs club had DEC
>> PCs.
>>
>> They started off with their proprietary Pros and Rainbows, then went 
>> to
>> industry standard PCs once the BIOSes had been legally cloned.  Part 
>> of
>> their PC work was with Olivetti.
>
> 	Wasn't it DEC that crreated the early 64-bit Alpha??
> 	Or was this afteer they were sold down the river to
> 	<was it Compac?>?  I didn't know DEC was selling Intel
> 	PCs.

Yes, the Alpha was a DEC product.

My dad worked at DEC from 76 through around  92 and I worked there 
88-93 as well as two summers in 84 and 85.  Until Ken Olsen left and 
things started to fall apart, I was ready to work there my whole life.

Chad



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