Sujet : Re: Lew Pitcher still around?
De : lars (at) *nospam* cleo.beagle-ears.com (Lars Poulsen)
Groupes : comp.unix.shellDate : 10. May 2025, 16:38:10
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <slrn101usn2.1fuf1.lars@cleo.beagle-ears.com>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : slrn/1.0.3 (Linux)
On 2025-05-10, Lew Pitcher <
lew.pitcher@digitalfreehold.ca> wrote:
On Sat, 10 May 2025 06:21:20 +0000, Percival John Hackworth wrote:
>
On May 9, 2025 at 9:02:49 AM PDT, "Lew Pitcher"
<lew.pitcher@digitalfreehold.ca> wrote:
Hi, Rubin
On Thu, 08 May 2025 22:02:07 +0000, Ruben Safir wrote:
Did Lew retire?
About 17 years ago, I retired from my job.
But, I still hang around here (and other newsgroups) just to keep in touch.
Did you work for SoCalEdison in Rosemead in the 1970s?
>
Sorry, Percival, but no. I worked for a large Canadian bank for 30ish years,
starting in 1977 (I retired at an early age). The closest I've got to working
in the US was a couple of work trips to Memphis :-)
>
I came with a couple
UCLA professors, one a geochemist and the other an Organic Chemist. We talked
about a database of organics found in air, I think. I ended writing it in
FORTRAN on a PDP-11/05 in a prof's lab.
>
That must have been some feat. Database technology was in it's infancy
then and, while the PDP 11/05 was a capable beast, it was underpowered
by today's standards.
Glad to see that we "well-experienced programmers" <grin> still keep in touch.
Well, 11/05 was the 11/10 when it was sold through the OEM sales channel
from Digital, and the 11/10 was a more compact second generation of the
11/20, which I think was the first PDP-11.
It was slow by today's standard, and IIRC there was no floating point
hardware. But slow CPU just meant "have patience". "Database" meant a
collection of data. You could try to roll your own ISAM, but mostly we
worked in a batch mode merging new data into a sequential file in a
"copy and update" pass. But it would be unusual to have more than a
couple of MB of hard drive (RK05).