home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky comp.sys.unisys:734 alt.folklore.computers:19356
- Path: sparky!uunet!news.univie.ac.at!scsing.switch.ch!univ-lyon1.fr!ghost.dsi.unimi.it!rpi!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!spool.mu.edu!yale.edu!newsserver.jvnc.net!darwin.sura.net!haven.umd.edu!umd5!gwb@n3gb.umd.edu
- From: gwb@n3gb.umd.edu (George Baltz)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.unisys,alt.folklore.computers
- Subject: Re: HISTORY OF WORD PROCESSING
- Message-ID: <18181@umd5.umd.edu>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 15:19:36 GMT
- References: <1993Jan24.075244.27275@spectrum.CMC.COM>
- Sender: news@umd5.umd.edu
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <1993Jan24.075244.27275@spectrum.CMC.COM> lars@spectrum.CMC.COM
- (Lars Poulsen) writes:
- > My first experience with machine-readable documentation was the Univac
- > Exec-8 Operating System Programmer's Reference Manual (fondly known as
- > the PRM; I used to know the UP-xxxx number by heart). I got in touch
- > with this in late 1970, but it was not new then. (It was very poorly
- > done, in UPPER-CASE ONLY, SINCE THE NATIVE CHARACTERSET WAS 6-BIT
- > FIELDATA AND THE OFFICIAL COPY WAS OFFSET PRINTED OFF COPY PRINTED ON A
- > MISADJUSTED DRUM PRINTER.)
-
- UP-4144, a number forever burned into my neurons. I even have an
- original, upper-case only, hand-bound(glopped) copy of the '1108 OPERATING
- SYSTEM EXEC PRM (VERSION 22.5)'! Unfortunately, there are no dates or OS
- level references in it, so I can't date it precisely. If, however, the
- 22.5 refers to the OS level, then it would be 1968 or 69 - the earliest
- System Memorandum is for Exec 26, from Sept 1970.
-
- > At that time, IBM had been producing manuals in SCRIBE for several
- > years, and the IBM 2741 Selectric Terminal was the industry standard
- > for what I believe IBM at that time called Text Processing.
- > I was working at the Copenhagen University Academic Computer Center
- > (RECKU, now part of UNI-C) and at the request of the biology department,
- > we installed terminal device drivers for the IBM 2741 and clones. In
- > 1972, we upgraded the operating system, and the old driver did not work
- > anymore, so we wrote a new one. About 5000 lines of assembly language,
- > and worked very shortly after we got the new system to test on. At the
- > same time, the "Document Processor" formatting software, and the editor
- > became available in ASCII versions so we could write lower-case
- > documents.
-
- The SM announces the ASCII printer support for level 26. I think our
- local ED did ASCII then, but most text was in FIELDDATA for many years.
-
-
- > Fun stuff. Sometimes I miss it...
- Me, too.....
-
- --
- George Baltz N3GB 301-405-3059 gwb@n3gb.umd.edu
- Captain (Emeritus), UMD Hors d'Oeuvres Team
- Computer Science Center, U of Maryland "I got FREE checking at BCCI"
- College Park, MD 20742-2411 - "Murphy Brown"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Keep poster happy...........grrrrr
-