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  • Collection: Digital Equipment Corporation

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Representatives of Digital Equipment Corporation at what appears to be a trade show. PDP-8 and Flip Chips are being displayed.

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Win Hindle is handing a check to unknown man. They are standing in front of a PDP-10.

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Instructor Ed Hilton teaches basic computer technology on PDP-8 computer to Maynard students.

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Digital President Ken Olsen presents the 1000th PDP-8 computer to Teradyne President Nick DeWolf.

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Instructor Ed Hilton teaching students with the PDP-8/S (ASR-33 teletype next to student on right).

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Kenneth Olsen, President of Digital Equipment Corporation, gives social security numbers to be typed by Duane Mulcahy. According to Olsen's description of the early days: "We did everything ourselves. My wife cleaned toilets and my brother Stan and…

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Digital President Ken Olsen reads documents while giving blood.

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A group of 4 male engineers(?) pose with LINC-8 computer (left) and ASR-33 teletype (right)

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A prize-winning entry in Digital's Photo Contest, taken with Pentax camera (2 second exposure at f/5.6)

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Two female employees discussing work in a Mill office. DECwriter and acoustic coupler in foreground.

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Publicity photo of the Memory Test Systems 2113 Core Memory Tester (built from DEC system modules.) A memory test computer was used to test the ferrite core memory modules in early general computers such as Whirlwind.

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Publicity photo of an early model of a Digital PDP-1 (Programmable Data Processor) computer. On table is a CRT display, control panel and paper tape reader.

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This appears to be a photo of technicians testing a core memory module with a Digital Equipment Corporation memory tester.

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Publicity photo of the Memory Test Systems 1516 core memory tester (built from DEC system modules.) A memory test computer was used to test the ferrite core memory modules in early general computers such as Whirlwind.

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Digital Equipment Corporation Main Street entrance during winter.

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Circa 1960, Digital Equipment Corporation's (DEC) first products were a range of packaged logic circuit known as Digital Laboratory Modules. Built with discrete transistors the modules performed basic logic functions (e.g., clocks, pulse generators,…

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The PDP-4 was 18-bit machine intended to be a slower, cheaper alternative to the PDP-1; it was not considered commercially successful. All later 18-bit PDP machines (7, 9 and 15) were based on a similar, but enlarged instruction set, more powerful,…

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DEC's first 12-bit computer which introduced the instruction set that would later be expanded in the PDP-8. The PDP-5 had a memory capacity of 1,024 to 32,768 12-bit words (roughly 2KB-64KB). It was the first computer line in the industry with more…

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Used in physics laboratories the Spark Chamber Scanning System used television cameras to record the location of cosmic ray events within the spark chamber. This information was recorded on tape and then fed into an IBM computer for further…

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ONLINE was an internal newsletter for Digital employees, chronicling product announcements, personnel assignments, and employee activities.

Only 1 issue from this year (October). If you have access to other months, please consider donating them…