Everyone remembers the MicroBee.
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Everyone remembers the MicroBee. But does anyone remember the Hartley Computer?
This is the often forgotten '80s Australian microcomputer from Queensland.
On display at https://acms.org.au/
#Computer #Computers #Retrocomputing #Retrocomputer #Hartley #tech -
Everyone remembers the MicroBee. But does anyone remember the Hartley Computer?
This is the often forgotten '80s Australian microcomputer from Queensland.
On display at https://acms.org.au/
#Computer #Computers #Retrocomputing #Retrocomputer #Hartley #techi zoomed to read and now I'm googling australian retrocomputers
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undefined luca@sironi.xyz shared this topic
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i zoomed to read and now I'm googling australian retrocomputers
@ajsadauskas @luca Here's a good article on Hartley Computer: https://ia.acs.org.au/article/2017/acs-heritage-project--chapter-34.html
"David Hartley (not to be confused with the British computer scientist of the same name) started his working life in 1966 as a civil engineer with Brisbane City Council. His work later took him to Namibia in southern Africa, where he was introduced to computing while conducting mathematical modelling of rainfall in the vast Okavango river basin, using FORTRAN on an ICT 1500.
"When he returned to Australia he decided that computing was more interesting than civil engineering. He started Hartley Computer in Brisbane in 1974 to develop software for the accounting profession, on the rationale that accounting could be easily computerised but that many in the profession did not realise that.
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"The new software was very successful â it was the only software in Australia designed specifically for small accounting practices. Hartley also designed SHEILA (System by Hartley for Entirely Integrated Ledger Accounting) for larger organisations. The venture included building hardware (the Hartley 3900) and an operating system. Both the hardware and the software were very innovative.
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âThe operating system was called RT86, a âtrue pre-emptive multi-user multi-tasking operating system for the 8086 chip. It was launched in 1980, 15 years before Windows PCs had that capability.
âHartley Computer was one of the first mini/PC computer vertical market successes in the world, with ultimately 250 staff and 3,000 sites in seven countries. In the process I became known as âthe father of computer client accountingâ, and we won several awards. The success was killed by hubris and a messy divorce. Big lessons, only partly learned at the time.â -
@ajsadauskas @luca Here's a good article on Hartley Computer: https://ia.acs.org.au/article/2017/acs-heritage-project--chapter-34.html
"David Hartley (not to be confused with the British computer scientist of the same name) started his working life in 1966 as a civil engineer with Brisbane City Council. His work later took him to Namibia in southern Africa, where he was introduced to computing while conducting mathematical modelling of rainfall in the vast Okavango river basin, using FORTRAN on an ICT 1500.
"When he returned to Australia he decided that computing was more interesting than civil engineering. He started Hartley Computer in Brisbane in 1974 to develop software for the accounting profession, on the rationale that accounting could be easily computerised but that many in the profession did not realise that.
...
"The new software was very successful â it was the only software in Australia designed specifically for small accounting practices. Hartley also designed SHEILA (System by Hartley for Entirely Integrated Ledger Accounting) for larger organisations. The venture included building hardware (the Hartley 3900) and an operating system. Both the hardware and the software were very innovative.
...
âThe operating system was called RT86, a âtrue pre-emptive multi-user multi-tasking operating system for the 8086 chip. It was launched in 1980, 15 years before Windows PCs had that capability.
âHartley Computer was one of the first mini/PC computer vertical market successes in the world, with ultimately 250 staff and 3,000 sites in seven countries. In the process I became known as âthe father of computer client accountingâ, and we won several awards. The success was killed by hubris and a messy divorce. Big lessons, only partly learned at the time.âyeah, saw it, very interesting, especially the rt86 thing
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