On 6/17/20 12:25 PM, Liam Proven via cctalk wrote: > https://archive.org/details/FarewellEtaoinShrdlu > > 28min documentary on the last ever edition of the NY Times to be > printed using hot metal -- before they switched to what are now a > quite choice assortment of late-'70s minicomputers. I think I spotted > a PDP, a Data General and some IBM device, but I am no expert in this > era. >
When I was in college, I went on a weekend trip with a friend to see where he worked during the summer. It was a print-shop, complete with both letterpress and offset--and a Linotype ("pot" heated with natural gas). The local advertising circular was still set with hot type and I witnessed the operation of that contraption. Noisy and wonderful. See the Twilight Zone episode "Printer's Devil" for another sample. I was told that most newspaper pressmen were alcoholics, as it blunted the effect of the then-toxic inks used in printing. Anent ETAOIN: Early on in the formation of the CDC spinoff, ETA Systems, I asked Neil Lincoln what "ETA" stood for. He related the story of his son and ETAOIN SHRDLU. Back then, the name of the supercomputer was referred to as the GF-10; later changed to the ETA-10. (GF standing for GigaFLOP). --Chuck