Jan. 10th, 2008

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My alma mater had a CDC Cyber mainframe computer from at least 1981 (when I started there) to 1986, when it was replaced with an IBM mainframe. I was loosely affiliated with the College of Mathematical Sciences, which was a unit of the university that had a lot of aspiring computer geeks like me. I wonder where they are now.

In 1985, there was a group of us that used the Cyber's messaging system (written in APL) to communicate with each other. We had "handles" -- mine was Cerebus, after the aardvark of comic book fame -- that we used on the system instead of our real names. Those were fun times. I wonder where they are now.

The Cyber was a great vector processor -- it excelled at mathematical calculations, which was required by the science and engineering communities of the university. Even though the OS was a little cryptic, it wasn't as cryptic as Unix.

I haven't seen any stats, but I'm guessing today's desktop computers are more powerful than some of the top-of-the-line Cray supercomputers of years ago. And they don't require liquid cooling.

Other than museums, are there any Cyber machines still around? Or have they all been scrapped?

If you went to college and was a computer geek like me, what machines did you have at your school? Did you spend any time on them? Any amusing stories?
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Some time last year -- I think it was around the summertime -- someone posted a link to an online comic that discussed music and time signatures. One of the closing lines was "Remind me not to loan you my Rush collection." Or something like that. I forgot who posted it, or what comic it was from. Can someone drop me a link?

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