Not the GE 200 I am used to! what did it have for a console? Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org) In a message dated 9/26/2016 3:21:41 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time, jwsm...@jwsss.com writes:
I was looking thru one of the yearbooks from my time at University of Missouri, Rolla. I found what I think is a photo of a GE-200. I "liberated" this system or one of them to a lab I had, when they were mothballed, and I could swear that is what the systems were. If anyone recognizes them, let me know. This is the first hint of any sort as to what I had. And my memory could be wrong. The square indicator and switch style is very much like what I recall for this particular system. I had gotten handed a couple of very heavy trays of Lambda power supplies which clearly were for some purpose due to how they were mounted. I later found the system I think was a GE-200 neglected in a stockroom in the EE building and recognized that the interconnnect would fit the power supply trays I had. The system was transistorized, not IC I might add. That was why it took 4 or 5 large Lambda supplies. Luckily we had not broken the supply tray up and i was able to play with it. The other thing i think might be of interest are several photos of an analog computer that the EE dept had. I know there was another much larger system in the Physics department as well, and maybe I'll luck out and find a photo of it later. Oh, and the blond at the keypunch. I might add that she is probably retired now. thanks Jim http://s1101.photobucket.com/user/jws1971/library/UMR%20computer%20photos