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The DEC PDP-7 is a minicomputer produced by Digital Equipment Corporation. Introduced in 1965, the first to use their Flip-ChipĀ® technology, with a cost of only $72,000 USD, it was cheap but powerful. The PDP-7 was the third of Digital's 18-bit machines, with essentially the same instruction set architecture as the PDP-4 and the PDP-9. It was the first wire-wrapped PDP.

In 1969, Ken Thompson wrote the first UNIX system in assembly language on a PDP-7, then named Unics as a somewhat treacherous pun on Multics, as the operating system for Space Travel, a game which required graphics to depict the motion of the planets.

There are a few remaining PDP-7 still in operable condition, and an interesting restoration project in Oslo, Norway.

External links


  • http://www.faqs.org/docs/artu/ch02s01.html The role of the PDP-7 in the creation of Unix is explored in The Art of Unix Programming ("Origins and History of Unix, 1969-1995")
  • http://www.bell-labs.com/history/unix/pdp7.html "The famous PDP-7 comes to the rescue" (Bell Labs' Unix history)
  • http://research.microsoft.com/~gbell/Digital/timeline/1964-3.htm PDP-7 entry from Year 1964 in the DIGITAL Computing Timeline
  • http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~toresbe/dec PDP-7 restoration project located in Oslo, Norway

DEC hardware | Minicomputers

PDP-7 | PDP-7 | PDP-7 | PDP-7

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "PDP-7".

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