Hi all.
This may be of some interest. From a friend at Utah:
Date: Sat, 30 Nov 2013 16:06:25 -0700 (MST)
Subject: [it-professionals] computer history: Arpanet IMPs resurrected
The simh list about simulators for early computers recently carried
traffic about an effort to reconstruct and resurrect the Arpanet
Interface Message Processors (IMPs), which were the network boxes that
connected hosts on the early Arpanet, which later became the Internet.
There is a draft of a paper about the work here:
The ARPANET IMP Program: Retrospective and Resurrection
http://walden-family.com/bbn/imp-code.pdf
Utah was one of the original gang-of-five hosts on the Arpanet, and we
received IMP number 4. Utah is mentioned twice in the article, and
also appears in the map in Figure 3 on page 14.
One amusing remark in the article (bottom of page 7) has to do with
the fail-safe design of the IMPs:
In addition ``reliability code'' was developed to allow a
Pluribus IMP to keep functioning as a packet switch in the
face of various bits of its hardware failing, such as a
processor or memory [Katsuki78, Walden11 pp. 534-538]. This
was so successful there was no simple off switch for the
machine; a program had to be run to shut parts of the machine
down faster than the machine could ``fix itself'' and keep
running.
As happened with early Unix releases, machine-readable code for the
IMPs was lost, but fortunately, some old listings that turned up
recently allowed its laborious reconstruction, verification, assembly,
and simulation.