Discussion:
Bit of improper exposure
(too old to reply)
Juancho
2021-02-22 22:27:15 UTC
Permalink
So it went like this, the jungfncc exchange with a family member, where
I could not respond to in real time:

"Sorry to disturb, but to access website of $PublicHealthService I need it
to read my ID smartcard, and it's asking whether my computer is Jvaqbjf
64 bits or Jvaqbjf 34. <emoji> <emoji> <emoji>"

And some time later:

"Done, I chose 36 bits and it seems to be working. <dancing emoji>"


I see utter failure here, and not precisely on the user's part.
--
EOT
Steve VanDevender
2021-02-23 07:28:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Juancho
"Done, I chose 36 bits and it seems to be working. <dancing emoji>"
I see utter failure here, and not precisely on the user's part.
I'm just pleased to see someone's still running a PDP-10 out there.
Claudio Calvelli
2021-02-23 08:23:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by Steve VanDevender
I'm just pleased to see someone's still running a PDP-10 out there.
Ah, I wish I still had one of them... I'm still running a PDP-11 [*] but I
don't have anything with a proper number of bits (like 9, 18 or 36).

[*] when it's very cold and the heating in the house can't cope - not
good to run it in summer though...

C
Dennis Davis
2021-02-23 08:37:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Steve VanDevender
Post by Juancho
"Done, I chose 36 bits and it seems to be working. <dancing emoji>"
I see utter failure here, and not precisely on the user's part.
I'm just pleased to see someone's still running a PDP-10 out there.
Or perhaps a Honeywell Multics machine...brings back memories
of this:

https://multicians.org/site-avon.html
--
Dennis Davis <***@fastmail.fm>
Claudio Calvelli
2021-02-23 08:48:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by Dennis Davis
Or perhaps a Honeywell Multics machine...brings back memories
https://multicians.org/site-avon.html
Ah, when I had to do my military service and managed somehow to hide the
time in a datacentre, there was a Honeywell DPS (can't remember the
exact model and it was referred to as "the DPS") and they had the only
implementation I've ever seen of a 10-finger firewall. And the file
access control was a message on the operator's console "xyz wants to
open file abc for reading, action?" to which one would reply "grant"
and log it in a (paper) book.

Memories...

C
ptomblin+ (Paul Tomblin)
2021-02-24 13:01:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Claudio Calvelli
time in a datacentre, there was a Honeywell DPS (can't remember the
exact model and it was referred to as "the DPS") and they had the only
At the University of Waterloo in the early 80s, there was some sort of
Honeywell that was known far and wide as "the bun" because a Honey Bun is a
popular snack food in Canada. All I know about it is that it was first
exposure to Colossal Caves Adventure, or "ADVENT" as it was known on the bun.
--
Paul Tomblin <***@xcski.com> http://blog.xcski.com/
Not that I'm annoyed at this particular bit of recto-plasmic sputum which
has crawled up from the depths of product mis-management to haunt me. Not
at all. -- Simon Burr
Dennis Davis
2021-02-26 08:23:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by ptomblin+ (Paul Tomblin)
Post by Claudio Calvelli
time in a datacentre, there was a Honeywell DPS (can't remember the
exact model and it was referred to as "the DPS") and they had the only
At the University of Waterloo in the early 80s, there was some sort of
Honeywell that was known far and wide as "the bun" because a Honey Bun is a
popular snack food in Canada. All I know about it is that it was first
exposure to Colossal Caves Adventure, or "ADVENT" as it was known on the bun.
The Honeywell Multics system included the game "Startrek". Many a
bored programmer spent many extended lunch hours blowing Klingons to
smithereens. Then for some reason -- many have been an OS upgrade
-- playing Startrek was restricted to out-of-office hours. Panic
and loss of morale spread throughout the Empire.

Fortunately the system used shared libraries. So pre-loading a
library containing a replacement for the system date/time routine
saved the day. The replacement routine always said it was a
Saturday morning. Morale was restored and, more importantly, the
Empire was saved as the Klingon body count continued to mount
throughout the lunch hours.
--
Dennis Davis <***@fastmail.fm>
The Horny Goat
2021-02-27 01:32:30 UTC
Permalink
ROn Fri, 26 Feb 2021 08:23:58 +0000 (UTC), Dennis Davis
Post by Dennis Davis
The Honeywell Multics system included the game "Startrek". Many a
bored programmer spent many extended lunch hours blowing Klingons to
smithereens. Then for some reason -- many have been an OS upgrade
-- playing Startrek was restricted to out-of-office hours. Panic
and loss of morale spread throughout the Empire.
Between StarTrek and lusting after my PHD candidate I knew I had to
cut my computer time if I was going to successfully finish my program
- which I did.
ptomblin+ (Paul Tomblin)
2021-03-01 15:17:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Dennis Davis
The Honeywell Multics system included the game "Startrek". Many a
bored programmer spent many extended lunch hours blowing Klingons to
smithereens. Then for some reason -- many have been an OS upgrade
-- playing Startrek was restricted to out-of-office hours. Panic
and loss of morale spread throughout the Empire.
I remember back then lots of turn-based Star Trek games, including one for the
Pet 4032. But one time I was in the computer lab everybody else there was
playing what seemed like one big real-time Star Trek game, with everybody
yelling stuff at each other about taking out that Klingon in such and such a
place. Because all our computer labs had a little blue Gandalf box beside each
terminal that would let you connect to different computers, I had no way of
knowing what computer they were on.
--
Paul Tomblin <***@xcski.com> http://blog.xcski.com/
"We must do something. This is something. Therefore we must do this."
- Military and Corporate Logic
The Horny Goat
2021-02-27 01:28:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by ptomblin+ (Paul Tomblin)
Post by Claudio Calvelli
time in a datacentre, there was a Honeywell DPS (can't remember the
exact model and it was referred to as "the DPS") and they had the only
At the University of Waterloo in the early 80s, there was some sort of
Honeywell that was known far and wide as "the bun" because a Honey Bun is a
popular snack food in Canada. All I know about it is that it was first
exposure to Colossal Caves Adventure, or "ADVENT" as it was known on the bun.
Hmmmm I was at McMaster j(ust up the road from you) around that time
and never heard of 'the Bun' or even the "Honey Bun".

Though I certainly knew the Colossal Caves - xyzzy!

Of course I'm the sort whose graduation present to myself from UBC in
1979 was an early model Apple II+......and I remember the hot grad
student in the computer lab who I dated but dropped as I had thought
she was divorced but actually only separated and I saw myself getting
stuck in a triangle if I continued.

Under the circumstances the grad program at McMaster was one of the
better things I could do since I was quickly falling HARD for Barbara
at UBC!
Niklas Karlsson
2021-02-23 09:47:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Steve VanDevender
Post by Juancho
"Done, I chose 36 bits and it seems to be working. <dancing emoji>"
I see utter failure here, and not precisely on the user's part.
I'm just pleased to see someone's still running a PDP-10 out there.
Yes, those machines were just the TOPS. ITS been known to run other
software on them, though.

Niklas
--
"There are some benefits to high blood pressure", Bob mused as
another mosquito exploded.
-- Bulwer-Lytton contest entry
Loading...