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ibm desktop manualsTo avoid shock hazard, connect and disconnect cables as shown below when installing, moving or opening the covers of this product or attached devices. The power cord must be used with a properly grounded outlet. To Connect Turn everything OFF. Sat Apr 4 15:19:42 2015Not just that, but because computing has been an important factor at. Columbia University since the 1930s, and in much of the world since theNot unlike the work archaeologistsStone. For this reason I believe it is unwise to be so quick throw out oldSome items are extremely rare, some are very expensive, many are just old,As of August 2011,Archive. Park, CA.The scope of this collection encompasses (a) the history of computingWhile some of the material (e.g. manuals, standards) are not directlyColumbia who used computers, or who were responsible for them, or whoFor background, see the History of Computing at. Columbia University website. (There is also one box for the CUA means the box is in the Columbia University. Archive; CHM means the box or item was sent to the Computer History Museum AugustIncludes a nearly complete set of Newsletters.Digest; C-Kermit 7.0 and 8.0 Release History (binders) USSR Kermit Conference Papers Blue Books and ITU-T Telecommunications Standards Relating to Modems. Standards and Collections Watson Lab was created by Columbia. Astronomy Professor Wallace Eckert, a pioneer in the automation ofSeveral significant andWatson Lab scientistsThe last five or six books on theHardbound. Lists (without much detail) the computing facilities available.Computation, The Thomas J. Watson Astronomical Computing Bureau. Columbia University, January 1940. The first book about machine methods inThis is a 1984 hardbound reprint by MIT. Press: Charles Babbage Institute Reprint Series for the History of Computing.Donated by. Will Pickrell, Baton Rouge, LA, in memory of his father William SmithApril 25, 2009. Includes pieces by John von Neumann, Richard Hamming, Paul. Herget, many others.http://www.alphapipes.com/userfiles/image/durag-flame-scanner-manual.xml
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A beautiful volume on high-quality rag paper withDescription of a Giant Electronic Calculator and the Problems it Solves. Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory, Columbia University, International. Business Machines Corporation, McGraw-Hill (1955). Hardbound. The storyWatson Scientific Computing Laboratory at Columbia University. McGraw-Hill (1959). Hardbound.Automated Calculator, Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory at Columbia. University, International Business Machines Corporation (1957). Booklet. Programming the IBM 650.A History, International Business Machines Corporation (1971).Watson Lab featuredTechnology, MIT Press (1995). Hollerith, Watson Lab.Millenium Books (1991). Hardbound, 3 copies, 2 autographed, 1 stillWisconsin Press (1999). Autobiography, hardbound. Carson McCullers livedHardbound. Not Watson Lab exactly, but touching on many related themesIncludes some private correspondence with the author.Information Processing, Columbia University Press (1982). Paperbound. Columbia, received his Columbia Ph.D. on the basis of his automation of theIncludes material on Columbia U.Computer Age, Harvard University Press (1990). Softbound,University Press (1990). Hardbound.Hardbound with jacket. Has some bearing on the WWII section of the Columbia computing history.Office during World War II, creating the almanacs used for all military andAt the end ofEckert is a forgottenAlso see Box 3 for copies of his correspondenceColumbia University: Astronomical Papers prepared for the use of the. American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac, US Naval Observatory, Volume XIX,Wallace Eckert, 1940-45. Hardbound, with jacket, expensive, like new.Office Sesquicentennial Symposium, US Naval Observatory, Washington DC. March 3-4, 1999. A wealth of information on the Eckert years at USNO.US Naval Observatory. Washington DC. For the significance of this publication seeUS Naval Observatory. Washington DC.http://el-master.ru/userfiles/creative-manual-layouts.xml For the significance of this publication seeAbstracts, in which every single research, instruction, and administrativeEach abstract is about 250 pages long. ICenter and the accomplishment of much work that might well have had anComputer Center. Technical staff participated in many of these projects, and each projectThe projects themselves are fascinating, about 100Columbia.Gould flatbed plotter and the Stromberg-Carlson graphics unit (which createdComputing Activities (1982).UNIX Systems, CLIO (1981-1987).Computing Activities (1984). IBM mainframe users lived. It came from Stanford but was built upon at. Columbia to such an extent (by David Marcus, and later Vace Kunkakci, whoFor the DECSYSTEM-20.Humanities (January 31, 1984).Anniversary Symposium, Friday, September 30, 1988. Souvenir packet. Frisbees were also produced for the occasion.Pages iii-v contain CUCCA's instructions on using the ROLMphone for dataMM was the electronic mail client used overwhelmingly by Columbia students,The original version was on the. DECSYSTEM-20, but when Columbia converted its main central academicJoe Brennan was and still is Columbia's Postmaster.Departmental liaisonsBudget Submission, April 22, 2002. Budget Submission, March 17, 2003.The Kermit Project was notDigital Press, Bedford MA (1987), ISBN 0-932376-88-6. Foreword by. Contains the Kermit Protocol definition. It remained in print from 1986A Russian edition was inUnion ( see sampleMicroDOS Library, Issue 47. USSR International Centre for Scientific and Technical Information. Moscow) (1987). ( COVER ). Kermit software and protocol in the Soviet Union.This is the user manual for the version of Kermit onDigital Press, Bedford MA (1990). The first published Kermit software manual.Digital Press, Bedford MA (1990). With MS-DOS Kermit 3.01Manuscript (1991). Kermit 1.0 user manual for the Macintosh, never beforeThis is a draft, some sections were not writtenDigital Press, Burlington MA (1992). ISBN 1-55558-082-3. MS-DOS Kermit 3.https://www.thebiketube.com/acros-bosch-oven-user-manual11 and later. Digital Press, Burlington MA (1992). Rare copy with a light blue cover.Verlag Heinz Heise, Hannover (1992). ISBN 3-88229-006-4. Hardcover. German translation by Gisbert W. Selke.ISBN 2-901143-20-2. French translation by Jean Dutertre.Computer Today?????-6, ?????Computer Today 6, Saiensu-Sha Co., Ltd.), Tokyo (1993)MS-DOS Kermit version for the NEC PC-9801.Digital Press, Burlington MA (1993). ISBN 0-55558-108-0. C-Kermit 5A. There was also an edition of this book with a special coverVerlag Heinz Heise, Hannover (1994). ISBN 3-88229-023-4. Hardcover. German translation by Gisbert W. Selke.Manning Publications, Greenwich CT (1996). The original Kermit 95 manual in printed form (subsequent editionsISBN 0-55558-164-1. For C-Kermit C-Kermit 6.0.SYBEX, Berkeley CA (1986). ISBN 0-89588-180-2. Includes a chapter on Kermit protocol. Motorola 68000 assembly-language programming.Digital Press, Bedford MA (1988),Espionage. Doubleday, New York (1989). ISBN 0-385-24946-2. How German spies used Kermit to break into. US computers and networks for the KGB. Hardbound, autographed.Digital Press, Bedford MA (1990). ISBN 1-55558-033-5. Forewords by Tracey L. LaQuey, Vinton G. Cerf, and. Frank da Cruz. Illustrates the role of Kermit in the worldwide. Web became ubiquitous.SYBEX, Berkeley CA (1991). ISBN 0-89588-180-2, Appendix C: The Kermit Protocol.Validation Methods, Oxford University Press, Oxford (1995). In this paper, the Kermit protocol is formally specified and provenCoriolis Group Books, Scottsdale AZ (1995). ISBN 1-883577-20-9. Compares Kermit with other protocols such as. Zmodem, and includes original source code for each protocol. Flatiron Publishing (1998), with new-and-improved entry on Kermit and someManual), Helsinki University of Technology (1983). Manual), Helsinki University of Technology (1984). Manual), Helsinki University of Technology (1984, a newer edition)Schlumberger (December 1986).J. Ricardo B. Ghirlanda, Telecomunicacoes Brasileiras S.A.http://mstar2k.com/images/c177rg-manual.pdf - TELEBRAS. Brasilia (1986). J. Ricardo B. Ghirlanda, Telecomunicacoes Brasileiras S.A. - TELEBRAS. Brasilia (1986).Magazine, Digital Equipment Corporation, No.44 (Spring 1987), pp.35-37.Lets PCs Chat with Mainframes, Data Communications Magazine. McGraw Hill (December 1987), pp.155-171.Kermit User Guide (May 1988)User Guide, for Version 2.31 (July 1988)Kermit. pp.128-157.Also in Data Communications International (June 1989).Woman (Sept 1990), p.94. Mini-review of Using MS-DOS Kermit in aMagazine, Winter 1990, p.29. Highlights Kermit in the first paragraph.Reviews Vol.32 No.6 (June 1991).News, Vol.1 Issue 2 (1991). Drivers, CONNECT 10, North Carolina State University Computing. Center, Vol.3, No.2 (October 1991).Communications Software” International Journal of Network. Management, Vol.1 No.2 (December 1991), pp.74-81.PDP-11 Based Mass Spectrometry Data Station to an MS-DOS Personal Computer,Record, October 14, 1993.Vol.1 No.1 (Fall 1993).Times, April 26, 1994 (A-Z of Computing 10).Non-English Computer Text, (1994). Submitted to ACM Computing SurveysKermit Software Program, Columbia Record (12 November 2003). Also in Space Daily, 9 December 2003.Reviews, Working Woman, Link-Up, Government Computer. News, American Association of Physicists in Medicine, Educom. Review, Columbia University Record; IBM LANACS product cover with. MS-DOS Kermit; Digital Press Flyer; Digital Press Order Form; Digital Press. Catalogs; Ad in Communications of the ACM; Wiley Catalogs; DEC Insight item;Review of the German. Edition of Using MS-DOS Kermit from a German magazine; some KermitBibliographic citations to Kermit papers in academicProfessional magazine; many others cuttings of this nature in English, German,Japan DECUS 1987 in Tokyo; International Kermit Conference in Moscow. USSR, May 1989 (program, handouts, news release, press reports in the USAPublishers Association.https://www.inkfactory.pk/wp-content/plugins/formcraft/file-upload/server/content/files/1629a30b062e7d---Coralife-digital-power-center-manual.pdfColumbia Magazine, Columbia Record, Computer Center Newsletter; PreparingCourses taught in the CU Division of Special. Programs and in the Computer Center.Management, PC Week, Data Communications, Computerworld, EDU Magazine. Japanese PC World, Japanese Computer Today, Digital Review, Microsoft. Systems Journal, The C Users Journal.This is in addition to whatever is in Box 8. Manila folders containingKermit, history of various specific Kermit versions, the 1984 KermitCyrillic text between unlike platforms in the pre-Unicode days. AdaptationOriginal unopenedThe first published Kermit article, written in 1983, publicationKermit and Telecommunications courses taught by members of the Kermit. Project.Q0282, Fast-paced Kermit, and Q0284, Installation, Support, and. Advanced Use of Kermit (1986-87).Seminary faculty in 1994 on how to have Hebrew text on a PC, includingTen banker's boxes. These are now housed at Columbia Technology Ventures.Correspondence with customers included. Before there was the Internet there was the ARPANET, with extremelyColumbia joined the ARPANET in 1984.Overview of policies and services.Terminal IMP, Prepared for the Advanced Projects Research Agency,The TIP provided dialup access to theNYU had oneColumbia's access to the ARPANETDistributed by NTIS, January 1978 (2 copies). This contains a complete mapMail, Remote Job Entry, Network Graphics Protocol, Network Time ServerInformation Center, Distributed by NTIS, October 1978. This book lists allIn those days, most sites on the ARPANETPrentice-Hall (1988). Hardcover. Andy is a Kermit contributor and author of MINIX, which was the inspirationCommunications Protocols and Software, unpublished manuscript (1988). This was the text of a Columbia University Special Programs course conductedThe object (neverPCs over serial ports (because in those days network adapters were notAddison-Wesley (1993). Hardcover.First Edition. Protocols, and Architectures, Prentice-Hall (1991). Second Edition.fitaki.com/files/files/Can-you-change-an-automatic-transmission-into-a-manual-transmission.pdf Implementation, and Internals, Prentice-Hall (1991). Second Edition.Analysis, Addison-Wesley (1987). Columbia's own Mischa Schwartz.One of the survivors is Bell Laboratories' UNIX. Although Columbia had no direct hand in the development of UNIX, the systemUNIX and C, and to some other developments at Bell Labs.Style (1974), paperpack. A pre-C, pre-UNIX book, with examples inSouth Wales (1977), and A Commentary on the UNIX OperatingSee the WikipediaLanguage, Prentice Hall (1978). The original C book that changed theLanguage, Second Edition, Prentice Hall (1988). ANSI C.Paperback.UNIX Software Operation: Volumes I-IV (1989). POSIX, Part 1: System Interfaces, IEEE (1993). Conformance to POSIX. System Environment (OSE) IEEE (1995).Computer Science at Columbia, and formerly the department chair.Bell Laboratories Computing Science Technical Report preprint, 3 April 1978,December 28, 1978. Photocopy.Software Practice and Experience, Vol.9, 255-265 (1979)For decadesSNOBOL was widely used at Columbia in the 1970s, both in systems programmingPrentice-Hall (1971).Prentice-Hall (1973).Prentice-Hall (1975).The same book, softcover edition published by Catspaw.High-Performance SNOBOL4 Language, Catspaw (1989). This wasIt was available on Cunix until Columbia switched from Sun servers toIf I'm not mistaken,Charging and Accounting in International Telecommunications Services. Series D RecommendationsTelephone Network and ISDN -. Operation, Numbering, Routing and Mobile Service. Recomendations E.100-E.333Telephone Network and ISDN -. Quality of Service, Network Management and Traffic Engineering. Recomendations E.401-E.880Conformance Testing Procedures for the Teletex Recommendations. Recomendations T.64Message Handling and Directory Services. Recomendations F.400-F.422, F.500Digital Networks, Digital Sections and Digital Line Systems. Recommendations G.801-G-961 (Geneva 1989).General Structure and Service Capabilities. Recommendations I.110-I.257 (Geneva 1989).https://creationstationdance.com/wp-content/plugins/formcraft/file-upload/server/content/files/1629a30bd520db---coralife-dual-power-center-manual.pdfOverall Network Aspects and Functions, ISDN Network Interfaces. Recommendations I.310-I.470 (Geneva 1989).Internetwork Interfaces and Maintenance Principles. Recommendations I.500-I.605 (Geneva 1989).General Recommendations on Telephone. Supplements. Recommendations Q.1-Q.118 bis (Geneva 1989).Specifications of Signalling System No.7. Recommendations Q.700-Q.716 (Geneva 1989).Specifications of Signalling System No.7. Recommendations Q.721-Q.766 (Geneva 1989).Specifications of Signalling System No.7. Recommendations Q.771-Q.795 (Geneva 1989).Digital Subscriber Signalling System No.1 (DSS 1). Data Link Layer. Recommendations Q.920-Q.921 (Geneva 1989).Digital Subscriber Signalling System No.1 (DSS 1). Network Layer, User-Network Management. Recommendations Q.930-Q.940 (Geneva 1989).Public Land Mobile Network. Internetworking with ISDN and PSTN. Recommendations Q.1000-Q.1032 (Geneva 1989).Terminal Equipment and Protocols for Telematic Services. Recommendations T.0-T.63 (Geneva 1989).Terminal Equipment and Protocols for Telematic Services. Recommendations T.65-T.101, T.150-T.390 (Geneva 1989).Terminal Equipment and Protocols for Telematic Services. Recommendations T.400-T.418 (Geneva 1989).Data Communication over the Telephone Network. Series V Recommendations Data Communication Networks. Services and Facilities, Interfaces. Recommendations X.1-X.32 (Geneva 1989). Two copies.Data Communication Networks. Transmission, Signalling and Switching, Network Aspects. Maintenance and Administrative Arrangements. Recommendations X.40-X.181 (Geneva 1989).Data Communication Networks. Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Protocol Specifications. Model and Notation, Service Definition. Recommendations X.200-X.219 (Geneva 1989).Data Communication Networks. Conformance Testing. Recommendations X.220-X.290 (Geneva 1989). This is the formal specification of the ISO OSI 7-layer network model.Data Communication Networks. Internetworking between Networks, Mobile Data Transmission Systems.https://webgirls-studio.com/wp-content/plugins/formcraft/file-upload/server/content/files/1629a30c18bad0---Coralife-lunar-aqualight-manual.pdf Internetwork Management. Recommendations X.370-X.370 (Geneva 1989).Data Communication Networks. Message Handling Systems. Recommendations X.400-X.420 (Geneva 1989).Data Communication Networks. Directory. Recommendations X.500-X.521 (Geneva 1989).Data Communication Over the Telephone Network. Data Compression Procedures for Data Circuit Terminating Equipment (DCE). Using Error Correction Procedures (1990)Data Communication Over the Telephone Network, Leased Telephone-Type Circuits (March 1991).Data Communication Over the Telephone Network, Error-Correcting ProceduresData Communication Over the Telephone Network. A Family of 2-Wire, Duplex Modems Operating at Data Signalling Rates of up. Leased Telephone-Type Circuits (March 1993).Data Communication Over the Telephone Network, Interfaces A Modem Operating. Switched Telephone Network and on Leased Point-to-Point 2-wire. Telephone-Type Circuits (September 1994).Data Communication Over the Telephone Network, Interfaces and voicebandArea Network: Data Link Layer and Physical Layer Specifications VersionThe original first-edition Ethernet specification,A Local Area Network: Data Link Layer and Physical Layer Specifications. Version 1.0, September 30, 1980. Another copy but with Digital Part Number. AA-K759A-TK, 5-hole-punched, and with plain paper cover.Communications Standards, Edition III (1986), in 3 volumes. CompilationTelecommunications Systems (1987). Abstracts of thousands of standards,Carnegie Press (1985).Carnegie Technology (1986). Networks, Carnegie Press (1985).Standard Code for Information Interchange (1979). This is the basisISO, ECMA, JIS, GOST, and many other international and national standardsEquivalent to ISO 2022.Equivalent to ISO 4873.Latin Alphabets No.1 to No.4 Latin Alphabet No.5,ISO 8-Bit Code for Information Interchange — Structure and Rules for. Implementation, Second Ed. (1986). Photocopy. Character Code Structure and Extension Techniques, Fourth Ed. (1994).www.csnjl.com/userfiles/files/Can-you-change-an-automatic-into-a-manual.pdf Control Functions for Coded Character Sets, Third Ed. (1992).Part 1. Latin Alphabet No.1, 1st Ed. (1987). Information Technology —. Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) —. Part 1. Architecture and Basic Multilingual Plane, 1st Ed. (1993),This is the international standard that corresponds with Unicode 1.0.U.S. Library of Congress (1987).IBM was one of the few companies that devoted serious publications to itsDesigning Enabled Products, Rules and Guidelines, IBM National Language. Technical Centre, Ontario (1987).IBM National Language Technical Centre, Ontario (1990).Architecture, Executive Overview, IBM (1990).Character Data Representation Architecture. Level 1 Reference,Character Data Representation Architecture. Level 1 Registry. IBM (1990). 715 pages.Reference Manual, 4th Ed., IBM (1994). Paperbound. Ed. (1995). Tables of all the IBM Code Pages, including the EBCDIC one.Columbia University (the Kermit. Project) was a member of the Unicode Consortium and played a role in theVolume 1 (October 1991)Volume 2 (June 1992)Columbia University on p.v of the Acknowledgements.Columbia University on p.vii of the Acknowledgements.Addison-Wesley (1980). The early history of text representation in IBMCharacter Sets, Netherlands Ministry of the Interior (1995).Format (December 1988). Descriptions Languages (December 1988).Guide to ECMA standards.Columbia University.Includes planning charts.Interpreter Operation and Wiring Examination (1964).With Analysis Chart.Prentice-Hall (1965). Paper.Organization Methods (1966).Organization Methods (1974).CUCC User's Manual: Part V (June 1973). Huge amounts of data were saved to magnetic tape at Columbia In case it becomes necessary to retrieve any ofSecond Edition (1985). Photocopy. Third Edition (June 1990).Wiley (1972). Paper.Paper.Style, Harcourt Brace Jovonovich (1972). Paper. Paper. McGraw-Hill (1970). Paperbound.Addison-Wesley (1974). Paperbound.Second Edition, Wiley (1974). Paperbound.This one is completely different from the first one. Fanfold reference card. Assembler Language, Data Management, and Macro Instructions. PamphletPlastic cutouts for making flowchart shapes,Crosstabs was a widely used statistical package, especially among ColumbiaSample Programs (1967). System Review Text (1967). Appendix (1967)Guide and Reference (1981).Conversational System (1982). SCSS is the interactive version of SPSS,Quick Reference SummaryUniversity in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s beginning with the PDP-4, PDP-7, PDP-8. PDP-9, PDP-11, PDP-12, and other minicomputers in the departments, and later. VAXes as well as desktop computers and word processors. In the ComputerInternet, and was the birthplace of many ideas and applications that live onProgramming (PDP-11), Prentice-Hall (1975). Hardcover with jacket.PDP-11, Prentice-Hall (1978). Hardcover.Photocopy of sections 3, 4, 7, and. Appendices 2 and 4. From Ted Bashkow's Computer Architecture class in the. Columbia Engineering School, circa 1972, which was based on the PDP-7 in. Columbia's EE Department on (as I recall) the 12th floor of the MuddThe whole thing, photocopy.Corporation (1977).Central Processor (1978).Guide, Columbia University Center for Computing Activities (1980). Unpublished unfinished manuscript addressing the problem that, while theThis manuscript was toProgramming, Digital Press, 1981.Corporation (1979). Paper. Runoff was one of the earliest text formatters. DSR was DEC's Runoff version standardized across all its product lines. Some Columbia Ph.D. dissertations were done in Runoff.Draft, Unilogic Ltd. (1980). Paper. Scribe was Brian. Reid 's CMU PhD project, the most ambitious and advanced text formattingWhile it was his Ph.D. project, itAll of the Kermit books were done in Scribe. Later, CMU sold Scribe to aScribe survived on our. Sun Solaris Cunix systems until the last one was turned off on FebruaryFunctional Specification, Digital Equipment Corporation (1983). DECnet wasColumbia founded a wide area DECnet-based network of universities including. CMU, NYU, Stevens Institute of Technology, and many others, as well asColumbia College, and Computer Science: CCnet, 1981-1990.Corporation (1987). An overview of one of the last proprietary computerStructures, Digital Press (1984).VMS Version 5.0.VMS Version 5.2.Medical Center departments in the 1970s and 80s.The PDP-12 12-bitThese were the first. PDP-11s.Teletype, paperDECtape, early video displays (VT01A storage tube, VT01R oscilloscope, VR14Disk pack cartridge systems. Clocks, bus extensions and repeaters,Early forms ofInterfacing all kinds ofOperating systems, programmingThe biggest PDP-11, the oneOperating systems, programmingThis one wasCard readers, disks, lineLSI-11 systems and operation.DECwriter printingDECwriter printingSmall LSI-11 basedModules, cabinets, cables.DECwriters. VT55 and VT100 video terminals; PDT-11 intelligent terminal.Line printers, disk drives, tapeDECwriters. VT100 family, VT125; modems, data communication, glossaries.Early Ethernet.Glossy, color nontechicalPC-sized system unit.The Rainbow was DEC's answer to the IBM. PC. DEC gave Columbia about 30 of these as part of the Hermit (not Kermit). Project, and they were placed in public PC labs along with Macintoshes andColumbia received about 30 of these also in the HermitVT200 series; laserMicroVAX I and II, peripherals, modems.A form of RSX-11 ran onThis operating system ran on ourThis was the editor deliveredThis was used in various. Columbia departments such as Chemistry, Math, and the College.BLISS was DEC's cross-platformDEC-20 GraphicsUltrix-32 V2.0 (1987). Ultrix was DEC's first version of Unix, we ran it onThis was the first 64-bitTENEX (which was to become TOPS-20). The sales brochures before 1977 wereBehavior”, Communications of the ACM, Vol.11, No.5 (May 1968).Utility”, Communications of the ACM, Vol.11, No.5 (May 1968).TENEX”, Communications of the ACM, Vol.15, No.3 (March 1972).DECsystem-10 Option BulletinDECsystem-10 Option BulletinDECsystem-10 Option BulletinDECsystem-10 Option BulletinDECsystem-10 Option BulletinDECsystem-10 Option BulletinDECsystem-10 Option BulletinNewsletter for. DECsystem-10 and DECSYSTEM-20 customers.Digital Network Architecture.These were all used in the development and support of Kermit software.Of these Jeff Altman. Kermit Project, 1993-2003, says:Frank, and to a lesserSome of the equipment which was destroyed inNew York through Virginia where a concerned soul literally met me behindThe only way to know how the actualThe manuals were nice to haveReston Publishing Company (1977). An explanation of how terminals work andHow the UNIXThis was the firstUser's Guide and Operating Instructions Version 2.0 (1982). Photocopy.D413, and D463 (1991).Kermit software development for Data General users.We put some of these in the dorms because the were made of metal, built likeAnd it eliminates the teletypewriter'sVT52, VT50H, VT50. Photocopy. Hardcopy terminal, pinfeedPerhaps the mostEd. (1981). The GIGI was DEC's attempt to create a new graphics standardThe GIGI could draw picturesIt could also do slide shows. DEC gave a big GIGI presentation at CUThe GIGI kind of fizzled out butProgramming, 2nd Ed. (1988). Programming, 2nd Ed. (1988). Two copies, one still shrinkwrapped,American Model), 2nd Ed. (1990).Secret Information (17 Jan 1991).Columbia University. When I came to work at Watson Lab in 1974, there wasColumbia had large numbers of 2621-series terminals in the public terminalManual (1983).Columbia for reasons I can explain if asked. Well, briefly, because it hadThe Systems staffIf I recall correctly, thisWe were a bigHowever, the APL language was requiredThis terminal was pretty much custom-built for us and we wound up buying aGuide, 1st ed. (1988). IBM 3100-series terminals were used to someWith several supplements. In a 3-ring binder.Draft, photocopy.It was rather large.German and English. AnWith these manualsBenutzerhandbuch (1991). In German.English. German and English.Unter Windows (1993). German. Installation, Operation and Maintenance (1995). In German and English.This was theIts graphics language isColumbia had a TektronixThis terminal was in the Seismology Department.Solving GuidReference Manual (1999).Modems: Reference Manual (2001).ULTRA 96, ULTRA 144 (1992), paperbound.Instruction and Maintenance Manual (1977). For use Teletype Model 33.Specification Version 5.0 (April 23, 1987). This and the following. Documentation for Columbia's modem-pool chassis, late 1980s - mid 1990s,Version 7.0 (December 14, 1990).S35i, C35i, M35i. Undated, in English.Firmware Version R2.0-020, Commands and Registers Reference Manual This is the first modem toThis modem, which was one of the first to routinely exceed 9600 bps, formedUser's Guide (1996).Reference Manual, Assembler. Fortran, DOS, and Operations. This is from the Engineering School; it wasCollection of reports and papers.Typesetting, Digital Press and the American Mathematical Society (1979).So cute, in fact, that I believe itManual, different editions, showing early developmentsDEC's first microcomputer was the VT180. It was built by adding two circuitEquipment Corporation, which as an early adopter and promoter of Kermit,Project for the best software of 1984 (there was also a bottle of champagne,Later on, a Club Kermit would beArtifial Intelligence Laboratory, AI Memo 555, 20 February 1985, 240pp. EMACS before it was GNU EMACS.System, ROLM Corporation, November 24, 1986. The initial proposal forProcedures for tech support,Kermit Distribution office had 2-3 full-time employees and several partI think the. In any case, the tape does not play on NTSC (North American) players.AcIS bought truckloadsFrom 1988 until theAcademic Information Systems, Columbia U (1988, 1989, 1990).Office of Communications Services, Columbia U (undated).System Administrator Guide (1987). Spiral bound.Release 9005 (1992). Spiral bound.Watson Lab's Algol-60 language.This was the standard text forMoscow (1988). From BESM to Super-EVM, a history of Soviet computing, with. Overview of Manufacturing AutomationThe new postcodes for all of unified Germany. Paper,Big RomanianColumbia MS 1939, PhD 1948. Asimov had three Columbia degrees, was on the. Columbia faculty, and taught computer science courses at Watson Lab.Ballentine Books (2004). Hardbound.T E X and METAFONT, presented in the following volumes:Typesetting, Digital Press and the American Mathematical Society (1979).Society (1984). Softcover, spiral bound. T E Xbook, Addison Wesley (1986). Deluxe hardcover editionProgram, Addison Wesley (1986). Deluxe hardcover edition with jacket,Addison Wesley (1986). Deluxe hardcover edition with jacket, like new. Program, Addison Wesley (1986). Deluxe hardcover edition with jacket,Typefaces, Addison Wesley (1986). Deluxe hardcover edition with jacket,English, French, and German. Also one of the few surviving Cups, and La Petite Grenouille, official chachka of Club Kermit in France.Some examples:Columbia. For example, no trace remains of the early DEC minicomputers suchColumbia, not mention the more common PDP-8s and PDP-11s; the SEL, IMLAC,This was used in theLast time IPh.D. dissertations, etc).Needs new batteries;The antenna is 5 or 6 feet high fully extended. The unit still works, but the broadcasts have either stopped or moved toWe used this clock in the 1970s and 80s for settingSolaris 8, QNX 4.25, NetBSD 1.5.2, OpenBSD 2.5, Debian Linux 2.1, FreeBSDMost of these OS's can be accessed via Internet, but several of them only byPC (not shown).Siemens-Nixdorf RM200 MIPS machine, circa 1995, running SINIX 5.42.A File Transfer Protocol (1987). They are original sketches by theMicroVAX-IIs, a VAXstation, 17 DEC Pro-380s, 11 DEC Rainbows, various VT50-. VT100-, VT200-, and VT300-series terminals, a DEC GIGI, a dual-boot DEC.