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  2. Peripheral Interchange Program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peripheral_Interchange_Program

    PIP.CMD in CP/M-86 Example using the PIP command in DOS Plus to create a text file from CON: console input. Gary Kildall, who developed CP/M and MP/M, based much of the design of its file structure and command processor on operating systems from Digital Equipment, such as RSTS/E for the PDP-11.

  3. Gateway AnyKey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gateway_AnyKey

    The Gateway AnyKey is a programmable computer keyboard that was sold exclusively [2] by Gateway 2000, Inc., as an option for some of their desktop computers.Introduced in the spring of 1991, [3] the keyboard was manufactured in at least five known versions and incarnations by Tucson, Arizona–based Maxi Switch, Inc., a subsidiary of the Lite-On Technology Corporation. [4]

  4. TSX-Plus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TSX-Plus

    Released in 1980, TSX-Plus was the successor to TSX, released in 1976. [2] The system was popular in the 1980s. The last version of TSX-Plus had TCP/IP support.. S&H wrote the original TSX because "Spending $25K on a computer that could only support one user bugged" (founder Harry Sanders); the outcome was the initial four-user TSX in 1976.

  5. FOCAL (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FOCAL_(programming_language)

    The FOCAL manual showed how to add commands to the FOCAL parser, so many sites added specialized commands for operating custom hardware. The Digital Equipment Computer Users' Society collected many patches and enhancements for FOCAL. There were even major enhanced offshoots of FOCAL, such as FOCAL-W, which added many features, including better ...

  6. EDT (Digital) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EDT_(Digital)

    EDT is a character-based text editor from Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) running on PDP-11 [1] (RSX-11, RSTS/E [2] and RT-11), and later for its OpenVMS operating system. [3] It can respond to single keystrokes, and uses function keys to implement commands to the editor. EDT was introduced originally as a line-mode editor.

  7. RT-11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RT-11

    RT-11 ran on all members of the DEC PDP-11 family, both Q-Bus- and Unibus-based, from the PDP-11/05 (its first target, in 1970 (note that the PDP-11/05 was released 1972, so this probably was a PDP-11/20)), to the final PDP-11 implementations (PDP-11/93 and /94). In addition, it ran on the Professional Series and the PDT-11 "Programmed Data ...

  8. MACRO-11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MACRO-11

    MACRO-11 is an assembly language with macro facilities, designed for PDP-11 minicomputer family from Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC). It is the successor to Program Assembler Loader , an earlier version of the PDP-11 assembly language without macro facilities. MACRO-11 was supported on all DEC PDP-11 operating systems.

  9. Q-Bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q-Bus

    The Q-bus, [1] also known as the LSI-11 Bus, is one of several bus technologies used with PDP and MicroVAX computer systems previously manufactured by the Digital Equipment Corporation of Maynard, Massachusetts. The Q-bus is a less expensive version of Unibus using multiplexing so that address and data signals share the same wires. [2]