I'm pretty sure you could, but only on very rudimentary line mode stuff. Note that
an IBM mainframe terminal doesn't really have the same paradigm as an ASCII
terminal.
You could go to a VM monitor and type IPL AIX and watch UNIX boot up.
-----Original Message-----
From: TUHS [mailto:tuhs-bounces@minnie.tuhs.org] On Behalf Of Grant Taylor via TUHS
Sent: Monday, November 20, 2017 10:29 PM
To: tuhs(a)minnie.tuhs.org
Subject: Re: [TUHS] UNIX on S/370
On 11/20/2017 06:15 PM, Ron Natalie wrote:
AIX deflected all this by actually making the user
facing stuff hang
off the i860/i386 nodes.
Does that mean that you couldn't access AIX/370 from a traditional mainframe
terminal?
That seems bizarre to me. But it does sound like some other strange things I've
heard come out of IBM before.
I remember talking extensively to Barry Appleman (VM’s
TCP IP guY)
about writing an X3270 xterm variant.
What would that have done? Are you meaning an app that would run on
non-AIX/370 OSs that could then act similar to the i860/i386 client / node? (Was it
trying to emulate a traditional serial dumb terminal?)
#confused
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die