A 1988 keynote by Gordon Bell on the history of personal workstations.
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@weekend_editor While you guys were playing with those toys my very first personal workstation was this.
Well... you had a color display before we did?
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Well... you had a color display before we did?
@weekend_editor That's why yours were toys.
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Well... you had a color display before we did?
@weekend_editor @amoroso Probably, but vision was also a topic in the AI lab. I've seen a researcher doing 3d video analysis using a 3640. Night long runs to compute 3d filters over videos. That machine also had a color board, IIRC.
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@weekend_editor @amoroso Probably, but vision was also a topic in the AI lab. I've seen a researcher doing 3d video analysis using a 3640. Night long runs to compute 3d filters over videos. That machine also had a color board, IIRC.
There was (eventually) a color board, which would either do full 32-bit color or pack things into 8-bit color with the colors looked up in a color map.
It was *very* expensive, even the monitor was north of $10k as I recall.
It was geared at Hollywood types, with gen locking and all that.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_and_Stella_in:_Breaking_the_Ice
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There was (eventually) a color board, which would either do full 32-bit color or pack things into 8-bit color with the colors looked up in a color map.
It was *very* expensive, even the monitor was north of $10k as I recall.
It was geared at Hollywood types, with gen locking and all that.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_and_Stella_in:_Breaking_the_Ice
@weekend_editor What timeframe was that? Interlisp-D supported color on secondary displays no later than 1990, but probably not much earlier than a couple of years.
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@weekend_editor What timeframe was that? Interlisp-D supported color on secondary displays no later than 1990, but probably not much earlier than a couple of years.
Late 1984.
Definitely by 1985. That was the year Scientific American had the Mandelbrot set on the cover. I had a color display & color board for some reason, probably because I write a demo for sales. Since I was a physics grad student on hiatus, everybody wanted me to show them how to map the complex plane onto the color display and "do mandelbrots".
That was fun!
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Late 1984.
Definitely by 1985. That was the year Scientific American had the Mandelbrot set on the cover. I had a color display & color board for some reason, probably because I write a demo for sales. Since I was a physics grad student on hiatus, everybody wanted me to show them how to map the complex plane onto the color display and "do mandelbrots".
That was fun!
@weekend_editor I found a couple of Interlisp-D source files for color support timestamped 1986.
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@weekend_editor I found a couple of Interlisp-D source files for color support timestamped 1986.
@weekend_editor The 1983 edition of the Interlisp Reference Manual has a section on color graphics on Xerox 11xx machines.
https://bitsavers.org/pdf/xerox/interlisp/Interlisp_Reference_Manual_Oct_1983.pdf#page=576
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@weekend_editor The 1983 edition of the Interlisp Reference Manual has a section on color graphics on Xerox 11xx machines.
https://bitsavers.org/pdf/xerox/interlisp/Interlisp_Reference_Manual_Oct_1983.pdf#page=576
@amoroso @weekend_editor very cool, I wonder if there are any infos/images of those machines with a color board & screen?
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@amoroso @weekend_editor very cool, I wonder if there are any infos/images of those machines with a color board & screen?
@symbolics I've never seen a screenshot of Interlisp-D in color. I'm not sure whether the color logo in this AAAI 82 photo is an actual monitor or just a sign.
https://interlisp.org/photos/AAAI82/AAAI82_9_hu_4a14d9fb5d0b6063.jpg
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And now for something completely meta: Interlisp-10 inside Medley Interlisp.'nThe terminal emulator of the window at center is connected to SDF's PDP-10 system running Interlisp-10 under TOPS-20 (TWENEX).
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This is progress - I have uploaded source code onto the #ibm7094 emulator and run it through the assembler.
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