> From: Bob Smith <bobsmith...@gmail.com> > saw a comment that this belonged to CJL.
Chris Lindblad? Sorry, I'm drawing a blank on someone with those initials who is connected with the LINC. > From: Jon Elson > Wow, those were fairly rare back when, and now there may only be a > couple in existence. Yeah, that's why I was hoping that someone connected to this community would get it, so we don't lose track of this rare artifact. I'd buy it, but i) it's not a PDP-11, and fails my 'PDP-11's only' test (intended to put a strict limit on the amount of junk I accumulate), and ii) I already have a whole bunch of PDP-11 gear I have yet to get to. :-( There's no way I would ever get to it. > Two complete CPUs, capable of running at the same time in shared memory > (I think). The documentation (1967 Small Computer Handbook) is unclear. It is clear that the general mode of operation was for only one CPU at a time to be running, but that appears to be to simplify programming (although it does say that "In the PDP-8 mode, the LINC subsystem is disabled"). The memory is indeed shared; it's on the PDP-8, and the LINC gains access via the standard PDP-8 'data break' (i.e. DMA) mechanism. Noel