In my first IT job, we had Raytheon clones there were serviceable enough but 
had a curious quirk. There was a rocker switch that flipped the entire display 
into upper case. Not the actual data, just the display. Made for some 
interesting debugging. Still don't understand the intention. 

.
.
J.O.Skip Robinson
Southern California Edison Company
Electric Dragon Team Paddler 
SHARE MVS Program Co-Manager
323-715-0595 Mobile
626-543-6132 Office ⇐=== NEW
[email protected]

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Pew, Curtis G
Sent: Monday, November 19, 2018 2:39 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: (External):Re: So much for THAT excuse | Computerworld SHARK TANK

On Nov 19, 2018, at 4:26 PM, Steve Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> S/360 machines I worked on had a switch in the PSW to set them in ASCII mode. 
> I don’t remember or know of any software that made use of this. So that bit 
> was eventually required to be ON to force DAT or XA. I have forgotten what 
> that bit was “stolen” for now. 
> 

Right. The expectation was that routines would check the bit and generate 
output in the appropriate codeset, and eventually everyone would be using 
ASCII. Instead, everyone ignored the bit and generated EBCDIC, so the bit was 
reused for something else (I can’t remember what either.)


-- 
Pew, Curtis G
[email protected]
ITS Systems/Core/Administrative Services


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