On 9/19/18 11:08 AM, Grant Taylor via cctalk wrote:

> So would you be emulating the 3174's twinax connection and the functions it 
> provides?  Functionally being (what I think
> is) a controller that would in turn communicate via TN3270 across the network 
> to Hercules?

correct.

non-trivial project, but something that needs to be documented.

coax and s/3x twinax terminals are similar conceptually.

There were companies like Telex/Memorex/MTX/Visara, Decision Data and Lee Data 
that sold terminals in both flavors
The ones for coax talked to 'establishment controllers' that were the actual 
intelligence of the terminal.
The terminals themselves were essentially polled keyboards and a (80 x N line) 
alphanumeric display.
Later multiple simultanious mainframe sessions were added to the terminals that 
you could switch between.

Coax uses a point-point connection between controller and terminal, twinax is 
multi-drop through T connectors.
Well, sort of. Eventually both systems migrated to phone style CAT cable with 
coax to RJ baluns and patch panels.

There were other companies that sold serial async converters that would take 
the polled protocol and could turn
it into something an ASCII serial terminal could deal with.

Then PCs got things like "IRMA" cards that could pretend to be one of the 
polled terminals, buffering the alphanumeric
screen image on a local RAM buffer the PC could communicate with. That evolved 
into hardware that could support multiple
sessions as well. Same thing happened with twinax, with different vendors. 
'IRMA' was a DCA/Attachmate/Microfocus thing.

The hardware got more and more integrated over time. The Telex 277 has three 
boards of TTL in the terminal. 276
generation used two 2901s. The last of the MTX terminals were pretty much just 
one National DP83445 ASIC, or one 317744
CIP ASIC in the case of Attachmate.

If you don't want real coax hardware, you just run TN3270. I'd like to have 
something runnable at the museum on period
hardware, though, that might be possible to maintain, which was why I picked up 
the Telex.



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