6 comments

  • tombert 23 minutes ago

    The DEC stuff feels like a foreign country to me.

    Most of the world is powered by Unix (and its clones/derivatives), at least in the infrastructure space, with a small percent still running Windows Server for some masochistic reason. Outside of playing with OpenVMS exactly one time with qemu (purely because I kind of liked their goofy shark logo [1]), I've never used anything from DEC, but throughout the 80s my understanding is that DEC was a force to be reckoned with. I think there was probably more diversity in operating systems back then.

    The DEC stuff was huge for a period of time, and I feel like there's an alternate universe where VMS and VAX stayed the standard, and Unix is the footnote. I'm not sure that universe would be better, there's probably a reason that Unix won overall, but it's not like DEC and VAX were tiny things.

    [1] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/72/Dec-vms-...

    • voidfunc 17 minutes ago

      Think of Windows NT as the spiritual successor of VMS and it never really went away.

      Sort of like if Plan 9 had succeeded Unix.

      • tombert 7 minutes ago

        Interesting, I hadn't thought of it that way; I didn't realize that NT shared ancestry with VMS.

    • commandersaki 18 minutes ago

      Outside of computing proper, DEC had a massive influence on networking too.

  • intrasight 23 minutes ago

    Flashback to DEC VT-100s in the CMU graduate student terminal room.