I've just finished reading Peter Salus' "A Quarter Century of Unix",
and this
time round, I was brought up short by the comments on Prime, Primos and The
Software Tools.
Has anyone done a simulator/emulator of the Prime? (I must confess, a
hardware architecture that's described as a cross between a GE-645 and the
Intel 80286, not only intrigues me, it also makes my toes curl. ;)
Has anyone attempted to get a copy of PrimOS for such a simulator/emulator?
And if one was to attempt such a feat, where would one go?
And Spafford says, commenting on Prime's version of Software Tools, that the
final release was into the public domain. Is it still extant? Has anyone
seen hair or hide of the creature?
That's the first matter/question. The second one is to do with /rdb, which a
quick search on Google informs me, was written by Walter V. Hobbs of Rand
Corp., and was placed in the public domain. It apparently is at:
ftp://ftp.rand.org/pub/RDB-hobbs
but I can't get through to it.
Is there any copy of it extant at some site where I can get through to it?
(I'm aware there is a software publisher that sells a more up-to-date version
of it, but I'd like to play with the original and bring it up to date
myself ;)
Thanks
Wesley Parish
--
Clinersterton beademung, with all of love - RIP James Blish
-----
Gaul is quartered into three halves. Things which are
impossible are equal to each other. Guerrilla
warfare means up to their monkey tricks.
Extracts from "Schoolboy Howlers" - the collective wisdom
of the foolish.
-----
Mau e ki, he aha te mea nui?
You ask, what is the most important thing?
Maku e ki, he tangata, he tangata, he tangata.
I reply, it is people, it is people, it is people.