Hello all! As some of you may already know, I'm currently a student at the University of Minnesota Duluth working with @pahp on our PDP-12 minicomputer. As some may have also already seen over in the PDP-12 #435 thread, I've been working on benchmarking our PDP-12 for the past few months for a...
Hi all, we did our annual PDP-12 demo in Dr. Ted Pedersen's architecture class on Tuesday, and it went really well.
In cleaning up / reorganizing after showing off our artifacts, I realized that we have something that I haven't seen on @bitsavers, but I maybe just didn't know where to look. It's a big poster of PDP-12 instructions -- it's kind of like the pocket reference in poster format. It is about 9.5x30 inches (24x76 cm). I scanned it in two pieces on the office machine and stitched it together with GIMP. I'll try to make a PDF version with OCR text. @bitsavers #vintagecomputing #retrocomputing #pdp12 #pdp #dec #umdpdp12
Jason did the edit, so I wasn't sure how much would go into this, but it seems that all my rambling about #pdp8 and #pdp12 hacking stayed in, and there's a link to the video I did for @tastytronic last year in the show notes. Also my #awk implementation of the Cloak of Darkness game.
Loads of #RetroComputing and #VintageComputing chatter throughout: Scott even called on folks to start targeting the 16kB-RAM platforms of the 1970s again!
Our PDP-12 (#435) is able to read tapes (but not yet write them). This OS/8 tape is close to 50 years old and still reads well. Here we use the TYPE command to print a long listing stored on multiple tape blocks. LINC and DECtape was able to be used as random access storage (like a disk). The block numbers were written forwards and backwards on the tape so that they could be read regardless of the motor's direction!
In this video, we have a tape mounted on the top drive and have already booted. Zach requests to print the file to the (virtual) teletype, and the blocks of the file are read in sequence.
#umdpdp12 #dec #pdp #pdp12 #retrocomputing #vintagecomputing