Computers I Have Used Through My Career

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Hardware Hall of Fame

Hi we have looked at chips with everything I thought I would look at the hardware around
them so here goes.

BBC Microcomputer System

OR BBC Micro was a series of microcomputers and associated peripherals designed and
built by Acorn Computers for the BBC Computer Literacy Project, operated by the British
Broadcasting Corporation. Designed with an emphasis on education, it was notable for its
ruggedness, expandability and the quality of its operating system.

The Acorn Proton was a pre-existing project at Acorn to succeed the Atom home computer.
It was then submitted for, and won, the Literacy Project tender for a computer to accompany
the TV programmes and literature. Renamed the BBC Micro, the platform was chosen by
most schools and became a cornerstone of computing in British education in the 1980s,
changing Acorn's fortunes. It was also moderately successful as a home computer in the
United Kingdom despite its high cost. The machine was directly involved in the development
of the ARM architecture which sees widespread use in embedded systems as of 2011.

Commodore PET (Personal Electronic Transactor)

Was a home/personal computer produced from 1977 by Commodore International? A top-


seller in the Canadian and United States educational markets, it was Commodore's first full-
featured computer, and formed the basis for their entire 8-bit product line, including the
Commodore 64.  In the 1970s Commodore was one of many electronics companies selling
calculators designed around Dallas-based Texas Instruments (TI) CPU chips.
 
IBM System/360 mainframe (1964)

In the early 1960s, IBM bet the company on the 360, and ended up with a product line that
more than any other popularized the use of computers in business. You can't beat the IBM
System/360 mainframe for longevity -- some are still running. At the 40th birthday party for
the 360 in 2004, Fred Brooks, who led the machine's development, credited its success to
OS/360, "the first industrial-strength, 24/7 operating system." The 360 -- and its descendant
the 370, introduced in 1970 -- so dominated the mainframe market that IBM and its
competitors were referred to as "IBM and the Seven Dwarfs" (Burroughs, Control Data,
General Electric, Honeywell, NCR, RCA, and UNIVAC).

Digital Equipment Corp. PDP-11 (1970)

This venerable line of minicomputers went through many permutations from its introduction
in 1970 until its end-of-life 1997. The first PDP-11 was a 16-bit machine that replaced the
popular PDP-8 and introduced a new Macro-11 assembly language that found favour with
programmers. A decade later those early models were still favourites in educational
institutions, due in part to the PDP-11's ability to emulate different systems. The PDP-11
declined in the 1980s, running up against its 16-bit limit as the cost of large memory fell.

Digital Equipment Corp. VAX (1977)


The 32-bit successor to the DEC's PDP-11, the VAX line helped solidify DEC's position as
the top minicomputer vendor. The name derived from Virtual Address Extension, in part
because VAX was one of the first minicomputer architectures to use virtual memory. The
VAX 11/780 introduced in 1977 was a 1-MIPS unit; dozens of iterations followed until VAX
gave way to its DEC AlphaServer successors in the 1990s. In 1998 DEC was bought by
Compaq, which in turn was bought by HP in 2001. The HP website says the company will
"continue to offer Open VMS VAX support at least through the year 2010."

IBM PC/AT (1984)

What? No IBM PC or XT? Yes, we know those systems began the PC era. But the pace of
change was so fast back then, and the power of Intel 8088 and 8086 processors was so slight,
that the more muscular Intel 80286 made "plain PCs" obsolete almost overnight. The AT's
memory, for example, topped out at 16MB as opposed to the PC's toy like 640K. The first
model debuted at 6 MHz, but an 8 MHz model quickly followed. The AT was discontinued in
1990, four years into the Intel 80386 era.
That was my first real computer although I had worked with the PDP 11

Compaq Deskpro 386 (1986)

In 1986, it was Compaq, not IBM, that introduced the first 386 desktop computer. A year
later IBM switched gears and introduced its disastrous PS/2 line of desktop PCs, which threw
Compaq a big chunk of market share. We recall those solidly built Deskpro 386s running
well into the 1990s.

Okidata Microline 100/200/300 series (1987)

Back when dot-matrix printers were king, the 9-pin Okidata Microline series ruled the office.
InfoWorld contributor Brian Chee thinks Microline must be "the longest lasting dot matrix
printer line in history," while contributor Roger Grimes suggests it should get an award for
"hardware product of the quarter century." Wherever people still need to print multi-part
forms, there's a good chance you'll hear a Microline whining away.

IBM AS/400 (1988)

The AS/400 moniker covered a wide range of minicomputers, from the early tower system
pictured here to mainframe-size behemoths. The first models, introduced in 1988, were
designed to replace IBM's earlier System/36 and System/38 lines. By 1997, IBM had sold
half a million of them, making AS/400 one of the most popular "midrange" business
computers ever made. The AS/400 line had a long run, ending in 2000 with a name change to
iSeries, but many early-vintage AS/400s are still in operation today.

LaserJet 4 (1992)

HP has dominated laser printing from the start -- and no laser printer had a longer run that the
LaserJet 4. Its Canon EX engine, which delivered eight pages per minute at 600 ppi, was
practically indestructible. Customers frequently reported a lifespan of a decade or more with
very little cleaning or maintenance.

IBM ThinkPad (1992)


Other laptops have come and gone, but the IBM ThinkPad line continues to soldier on 17
years later, sporting its trademark flat-black shell and red TrackPoint pointing device. The
inaugural 700 series ThinkPads unveiled in 1992 had an Intel 80486 CPU and were among
the first laptops to feature a relatively large color LCD screen. Known for their sturdy
construction and long battery life, ThinkPads remain the desktop replacement laptops of
choice in many businesses. In 2005, Chinese manufacturer Lenovo purchased IBM's PC
division, but a predicted decline in ThinkPad quality never materialized.

Iomega Zip Drive (1994)

The Zip drive did more to popularize removable storage than any other device. The original
drive was introduced in 1994 with 100MB cartridges the size of 3 1/2-inch floppies; it
replaced Iomega's groundbreaking but less popular Bernoulli Box, which used 5 1/4-inch
cartridges (the most popular cartridges held only 20MB). When CD-RW got up to speed in
the late 1990s, Zip drives became obsolete, but the occasional Zip cartridge still turns up in
the back of desk drawers today.

Cisco PIX 515 (1995)

It's been a long time since Cisco acquired Network Translation and pushed PIX (Private
Internet Exchange) into the limelight, which helped popularize NAT (network address
translation) and eliminated the worry that the world would run out of IP addresses. As the
standard-bearer of Cisco's network security strategy for the better part of a decade, the PIX
line was replaced by Cisco's ASA security appliances, which are bigger, better, and faster.
Many original PIX 515s are still running, sporting 233-MHz Pentium II CPUs and 32MB of
RAM.

US Robotics PalmPilot (1996)

The first broadly popular PDA, the PalmPilot arrived with a passive black-and-white LCD,
either 128K or 512K of RAM, and a distinctive four-button layout dedicated to personal
information management. The primary innovation was the Graffiti handwriting recognition
system, which enabled users to enter (slightly modified) characters with a stylus directly on
the LCD. A legal challenge forced Pilot to be dropped from the name, but over the years, a
large ecosystem of inexpensive applications grew up around the Palm, helping it maintain
long-running dominance in a fast-moving PDA market.

Apple Power Mac G3 (1997)

In the mid-1990s, Apple seemed doomed to die, after a series of awkward management
changes, lacklustre products, and a sense of having lost out to Windows. In November 2007,
just two months after Steve Jobs regained control of the company, Apple released its Power
Mac G3, a tower system that re-established its rep as a leading computer maker and used a
new, more-competitive IBM chip. Even today, Power Mac G3s are easy to find in use as
workhorse systems, given their strong reliability and an engine that can run Mac OS X well
even though that next-gen OS didn’t exist when the G3 was designed. Sure, Apple has
delivered many faster, more capable systems in the intervening 12 years, but the G3 remains
well entrenched.

Sun Ultra Enterprise 10000 Starfire (1997)


The big iron of Web servers, the Ultra Enterprise 10000 Starfire put muscle behind the Sun
"dot in dot com" slogan of the boom era. It could be configured with up to 64 UltraSparc II
processors and boasted a memory bus whose fault-tolerant design originated in Cray
Research's Business Systems Division. A fully configured system sold for over $1 million
and provided plenty of headroom to last until the dot-com bust.

Apple PowerBook G3 (1998)

Apple has long touted its laptops as the top performing notebooks regardless of OS. The
second-generation PowerBook G3 (the so-called Wall street design), released in March 1998,
continued that mantle while ushering in a lightweight, curvy design that moved laptops away
from the then-entrenched squared-off IBM ThinkPad aesthetic. Two subsequent variations --
the Wall street II design of August 1998 and the Lombard design of May 1999 -- continued to
push the lighter and thinner envelope while boosting battery life. For the Mac community, the
second-generation PowerBook G3 marked the shift from the desktop to the laptop as the
primary computer, and arguably pushed PC laptops along the same path. These PowerBook
G3s remained in use for nearly a decade.

Cisco Catalyst 6509 (1999)

Ask just about any network admin what the mainstay of a large corporate LAN is, and they'll
answer the Cisco 6509. At a decade old, original 6509s can still be found in datacenters the
world over, doing everything from large port aggregation to operating as the core of
enormous switched networks. Options abound with firewalling, WAN, IDS, VoIP, PoE,
gigabit copper, fibre, and 10G supports. In many cases, original 6509 chassis have had
significant performance and feature upgrades without ever leaving the rack, thanks to the
highly expandable nature of the design. It's the big switch that could, and still does.

HP ProLiant DL360 G2 (2003)

HP's DL360 line of 1U rack mount servers became ubiquitous shortly after their release.
They offered a big bang for the buck and a small package. Through the years, the DL360 has
been called into service for every possible application, from virtualization to Citrix farms.
Armed with the very stable and easily managed SmartArray RAID controller and a wide
variety of possible configurations, they became the Swiss Army knife of modern IT.

Dell PowerEdge 2800 (2005)

Here's another server that s still performing exceptionally well. A typical Dell PowerEdge
2800 was equipped with two single-core 3.6Ghz Intel Xeon CPUs, 8GB of RAM, and four
146GB U320 SCSI drives in a RAID5 array. According to InfoWorld contributor Paul
Venezia, his "PowerEdge 2800 continues to perform key tasks with aplomb more than three
years after it first made its appearance in the lab."

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