I started on ADM-1 (upper case only but they did have cursor addressing) and ASR-33 teletypes. I remember using all the backslash escapes to write my first C program while Mike Muuss looked on in the UGL at Hopkins. Later we got HP terminals with upper and lower case.
Hopkins had a KSR37 in the EE department with a greek type box on it even. It was stored in a closet dubbed (obviously) “The KSR Room.” The pennywhistle modem I had lived there. We used to place collect calls to the Pentagon TIP (we’d tell the operator we were calling a computer and if it beeped it accepted the charges). Later they upgraded the printing with a Diablo-ish (daisy wheel) printer. We had such printers over in various other labs I had access to (Psych department, etc.).
Hopkins actually had one of the “braindamaged Hazeltines” (leave poor tilde alone) and a few ADM-3’s and for some idiotic reason the department bought a couple of SWTPC implementations of the TVTypewriterII which were just awful. Tektronix donated a bunch of stuff to us so we ended up with both 4014-ish things and some real raster Tek graphics terminals.
When I went over to BRL we primarily dealt with some VT52 clones which were preferred because they put the control key next to the A which we liked. Eventually, we got the Teletype 5620 the commercialization of the Blit/jerq DMD terminals. By the time I left most of us had either Suns or SGIs on our desk though.
At home I had an ADM-3 followed by one of the VT-52 clones and also a ASR 37 that I got surplus (It had a Rocky Flats property tag on it). When I moved to NJ I ditched them all and just used at terminal emulator on my DOS PC-AT for the longest time. I actually had a 9600 SLIP line and a router to the Ethernet in my house (I used one of the RU subnet numbers).
From: TUHS [mailto:tuhs-bounces@minnie.tuhs.org] On Behalf Of Clem Cole
Sent: Friday, July 8, 2016 4:49 PM
To: Random832
Cc: TUHS main list
Subject: Re: [TUHS] Slashes (was: MS-DOS)
On Fri, Jul 8, 2016 at 2:23 PM, Random832 <random832@fastmail.com> wrote:
What terminals did you use, back in those days?
Hard copy (that I remember, but we have proven how poor memory can be):
Glass TTY (not complete but for a quick memory dump)
Clem