On Tue, 5 Mar 2019, Brent Hilpert via cctalk wrote:

TRIUMF was using /11s for cyclotron control I believe, that's not where you anticipate UNIX showing up.

But was it Unix or something else like RT-11?  Or was it a VAX?

Between 1985 and 1990 I became aquainted with a guy named Jim Stewart who was teaching VAX/VMS programming for DEC in Vancouver and had a previous life administering and programming VAX/VMS machines at TRIUMF.

Even three or four years ago Dow Chemical was still using VAXen running VMS to manage their chemical plant(s) near Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta and some time earlier the last surviving L-1011 (or was it a DC10?) flight simulator was in Vancouver and it was controlled by a VAX-11/7?? long after VAXen had fallen out of fashion.

PDP11 boxes and VAXen show up in some really obscure places.

--
  Richard Loken VE6BSV            : "...underneath those tuques we wear,
  Athabasca, Alberta Canada       : our heads are naked!"
  ** rllo...@telus.net **         :    - Arthur Black

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