Ø People like me did not start to "port" UNIX until the 16 bit micro's
show up -- i.e. the 68000, Z8000, 8086 where you could build a 'microcomputer'
that was close to the power of the 'minicomputer' for a lot less money.
Mike Muuss’s standard answer to any question was that we could put UNIX on it. This is
how he wrested the RSTS-running PDP-11/45 away from the EE department to start with (only
proviso is that he had to get Basic+ running on it). At BRL, he picked up a bunch of
PDP-11 variants that were lying around (particularly an 11/34-based RJE system for the
Cyber mainframe. We pitched the card reader but used the printer, the vector general
graphics system, and the DQ-11/modem combo). Then when BRL commissioned the HEP to be
built and nobody had a clue what software to put on it, we launched into the port on the
HEP. This was 1982. It our first foray into a non PDP/VAX platform.
Amusingly, I had a manager show up in my office and tell me that in a few years they would
have the performance of a VAX in a little cubic foot box I could have on my desk all to
myself and I’d be happy. It was then I coined “Ron’s rule of computing.” Our
expectations grow with the technology. Ron always needs a computer “this” (holding my
hands out to approximately the width of a 780 cpu cabinet) big. It worked for many
years but I have to admit around 2000 or so, I started being happy with comptuers about
the size of 2 drawer filing cabinets.