It connected to its hosts via a (discrete TTL-based) microcontroller or “TIU” and seems to
have been connected almost immediately
to Unix systems: the oldest driver I have been able to locate is in the V4 tree
(
https://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/utree.pl?file=V4/nsys/dmr/tdir/tiu.c) It used a
DMA-based parallel interface into the PDP11. As such, it seems to have been much faster
than
the typical Datakit connection later - but I know too little about Datakit to be sure.
I have vague memories here that maybe Heinz can help with if his are any better.
I believe that Sandy played a part in "the loop" or "the ring" or
whatever it
was called that we had connecting our Honeywell 516 to peripherals. I do
remember the 74S00 repeaters because of the amount of time that Dave Weller
spent tuning them when the error rate got high. Also, being a loop, Joe
Condon used to pull his connectors out of the wall whenever people weren't
showing up to a meeting on time. I don't know whether our network was a
forerunner to the spider network.
Jon