#rt11#pdp11
@dosnostalgic VAX/VMS circa 1978 used to boot with PDP-11 RSX-11M compatibility mode available and a fair chunk of the apps in the early VAX/VMS versions were RSX-11M apps running in compatibility mode.
The VAX-11 boxes supported PDP-11 instructions in hardware.
You could run your existing PDP-11 RSX-11M apps directly, too.
That all ended at VAX/VMS V4.0 (~1984), and with then-new VAX models after VAX 8600.
VAX 8600 was originally to be named VAX-11/790, but marketing marketed and dropped the -11 with the βarchitecture for the β80sβ.
PDP-11 RSX-11M compatibility mode became a separate product, and the PDP-11 instructions were emulated, and the -11 was dropped from VAX.
Technically, an LSI-11 console processor booted RT-11 from the 8β console floppy which then booted the VAX-11/780 (organizationally within he hardware, the VAX was an enormous LSI-11 peripheral) which ran VAX and PDP-11 instructions and which could run simh emulator to emulate PDP-11 running RT-11. If the LSI-11 failedβas happened on a couple of occasionsβthe VAX could continue to run. Just not reboot.
The approach Apple used for migrations with Rosetta and Rosetta 2 was far smoother.
Yeah. Fun times. When it all worked.
There are shenanigans in newer boxes too, but theyβre usually somewhat better hidden.
#digitalequipmentcorporation #OpenVMS #VMS #VAX #PDP11 #RSX11 #RSX11M #RT11 #retrocomputers #retrocomputing #history
Pacman for RT11 in the DEC PDP-11/53 with a VT100 terminal
https://toobnix.org/videos/watch/26eca4b4-7cab-49ab-b15e-21819563cae7
Pacman para RT11 de la DEC PDP-11/53 con terminal VT100
https://fediverse.tv/videos/watch/184c54a7-cfee-40ad-9360-619a6cfad3d1