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by hmsp
668 days ago
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I once had a magical collection of chips from old Unix workstations - dec alphas and vax, dig and sun. I was responsible for cleaning out a large storage room of computers from the 70s-90s and I pulled all the processors I could because they were amazing objects to look at. I remember throwing out handfuls of ram chips measured in the KB and thinking how much each handful originally cost. I was like 19 when I did this and everything got lost to time in the end. It sure was a fun time as a Unix geek playing with all this old hardware. We had a dec box running netbsd that had an absurd uptime - like 12 years or something. Labs of Sunrays running off of 8 processor mainframes. SGI’s around the edges. But even then I was slowly replacing this stuff with Linux. There was just no competition and as much as I loved the legacy Unix stuff it wasn’t as nice or as easy to run as open source alternatives. I’m glad I got to play in that world though. |
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What made it so exciting? Was it just the novelty aspect of having different flavors, architecture, and environments?