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Date:      Tue, 14 Nov 2000 17:38:17 +0000 (GMT)
From:      Terry Lambert <tlambert@primenet.com>
To:        tlambert@primenet.com (Terry Lambert)
Cc:        stork@qnet.com (Heredity Choice), grog@lemis.com (Greg Lehey), tlambert@primenet.com (Terry Lambert), cfuhrman@tfcci.com (Chris Fuhrman), chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Microsoft Source (fwd)
Message-ID:  <200011141738.KAA22782@usr08.primenet.com>
In-Reply-To: <200011141602.JAA19964@usr08.primenet.com> from "Terry Lambert" at Nov 14, 2000 04:02:14 PM

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> The Tandy 6000.  It had the cutest hack, too: it ran 2 68000
> processors, and when one took a protection fault, it would use
> the state from the other processor, one clock behind, in order
> to recover the otherwise destroyed instruction counter.  Ah, I
> remember the thing well... truly a mrvel of silver and black
> plastic; our had a 14" HD, with a monster 10MB of space... I
> think this was one of the last machines where we distributed our
> software on 8" Shugart floppies...

Sorry, I misremembered this.  The Tandy 6000 Xenix ran in
medium model, and wasn't demand paged.

The system I was thinking of was the Charles Rivers Data System
machine at the Weber State University Computer Science Dept.,
where Wes Peters and I were first exposed to UNIX, back in
1982.


					Terry Lambert
					terry@lambert.org
---
Any opinions in this posting are my own and not those of my present
or previous employers.


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