Good question. MGR was somewhat later. It was done by a guy at BellCore
if I remember correctly. I used it some on a small sparcstation. On that
hardware it was super fast, whereas X11 was much slower. This would have
been in early-to-mid 90s.
Arnold
Dave Brown <dave(a)bagpuss.nu> wrote:
Was there a connection between MGR and Blit? Just
from a programming
standpoint there is similarities in that they both transport agnostic;
using escape sequences for graphical/UI functions. I know MGR code does
little more than provide a bitblit interface and it’s upto whoever
ports it to implement the interface to the hardware.
I took the MGR code, and extended the distribution for the Atari ST
(added new demos, fonts and libraries); many years ago.
Might be worth porting it to SDL for a giggle.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jul 2, 2023, at 3:11 AM, arnold(a)skeeve.com wrote:
> I had a DMD 5620 for a few (too short) years at Georgia Tech; AT&T
> gifted a number of them as well as two 3B20s to us. We used the DMDs
> on a vax running 4.2 BSD. They were heavy suckers! I think close to
> 50 pounds!
>
> It was wonderful to use. Extremely productive as compared to a regular
> terminal with just one session.
>
> Unfortunately, there were enough of the things in use that it drove
> the poor vax to its knees.
>
> Nonetheless, I have fond memories of it to this day.
>
> Arnold
>
> Rob Pike <robpike(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> The original name was Jerq, which was first the name given by friends at
>> Lucasfilm to the Three Rivers PERQ workstations they had, for which the
>> Pascal-written software and operating system were unsatisfactory. Bart
>> Locanthi and I (with Greg Chesson and Dave Ditzel?) visited Lucasfilm in
>> 1981 and we saw all the potential there with none of the realization. My
>> personal aha was that, as on the Alto, only one thing could be running at a
>> time and that was a profound limitation. When we began to design our answer
>> to these problems a few weeks later, we called Lucasfilm to ask if they
>> minded us borrowing their excellent rude name, and they readily agreed.
>>
>> Our slogan: A jerq at every desk.
>>
>> This was cool, we had good shirts, and Bart even made license plates that
>> read JERQ. But when the thing started to get interesting, Sam Morgan,
127's
>> director, got very nervous. He didn't want to talk to his colleagues
about
>> how good our jerqs were. So he proposed "RX" (research experimental)
and
>> Bart and I immediately huddled down and came up with blit, from bitblt, and
>> that was accepted. So it was Sam who forced the issue. A shame really, but
>> BTL management wasn't famous for its sense of humor.
>>
>> This is all with the 68000 original, which had been hand-built by us using
>> wire wrap and then in larger but still modest numbers by a company on Long
>> Island whose name was Northern Atlantic if I remember right. Wing Moy did
>> most of the work there.
>>
>> Teletype came and measured and analyzed and proposed building some with
>> metal cases and more mass producible board technology, and that became what
>> people around the company, and later elsewhere, called the Blit.
>>
>> The DMD-5620 was the WE32000 version, which resulted from a decision by
>> Scanlon to ram up WE32000 production by selling this product with the chip
>> in it, at a loss because the chip alone cost something like $2000, compared
>> to something like $25 for the 68000. Also, the WE32000 was far less
>> suitable a chip, being buggy and also slower at the specific tasks like bit
>> shifting that you needed for fast graphics.
>>
>> I still have the license plate. Here's a picture I made today.
>>
>> [image: IMG_4673.jpg]
>>
>> For those perhaps too young to understand what a revolution the merging of
>> graphics and multitasking was back then, some testimonials from the time:
>>
>> From dmr Tue Apr 7 02:01 EST 1981 remote from research
>>
>>
>> Don't lose interest in the jerq terminal stuff, no matter what
>>
>> momentary problems you have with the device or the system.
>>
>> I think the approach and the progress so far are very exciting.
>>
>>
>>
>> From wild!scj Sun Nov 21 09:52 EST 1982
>>
>> Well, after an afternoon with the bilt, seeing asteroids, crabs, maxwell,
>>
>> etc. etc, I asked Sarah what she liked best.
>>
>>
>> "I liked mpx best"
>>
>>
>> "What did you like about it?"
>>
>>
>> "I liked making all the different boxes, and making all the different
things
>>
>> happen in them, and making them go away."
>>
>>
>> I think "universal appeal" is not too strong a term...
>>
>>
>>
>> From alice!vax135!tbl Sat May 14 12:07:42 1983
>>
>> To: alice!rob
>>
>> Subject: you've spoiled me
>>
>>
>> I can't believe it. I'm sitting here at home in front of my
>>
>> 2621, and I can't work.
>>
>>
>> Damn it. I've got to get a blit at home.
>>
>> [Turner and I are really pleased with the software. Good job!]
>>
>>
>>
>> -rob
>>
>>
>> On Sat, Jul 1, 2023 at 1:35 AM Seth Morabito <web(a)loomcom.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Speaking of the Jerq...
>>> Is there a definitive history anywhere of the progression from Jerq up
>>> through the AT&T 730MTG? When I wrote my DMD5620 emulator I tried to
find a
>>> complete history, but wasn't able to. I just found various (possibly
>>> apocryphal) bits and pieces here and there about AT&T objecting to
various
>>> names until "DMD" was settled on by marketing at some point, and
forcing
>>> the use of a WE32K in the 5620 for make-corporate-happy reasons.
>>> -Seth
>>> --
>>> Seth Morabito * Poulsbo, WA *
https://loomcom.com/