HP To Kill 3000 System After 30 years 237
James Ots writes "HP have announced that their 30 year old HP3000 series of computers will be joining their calculators on the scrapheap. Which is a shame, because a lot of work has gone into porting unix tools to the platform, and now we'll have to stop and port MPE (the HP3000 OS) tools to unix. Cnet have pre-announced the announcement, and the guys on comp.sys.hp.mpe don't seem too happy. (See also CSL's page on the story)"
pre(1 + announce) (Score:1)
So this doesn't come from HP ?
BTW I am quite sad as I learnt Unix on these systems, back 15 years ago... What makes it even harder to bear is the Compaq logo beside the title of this story.
Re:pre(1 + announce) (Score:1)
Re:pre(1 + announce) (Score:2, Interesting)
According to the FAQ [faqs.org], it rather ran iX, you're right, I may have been confused between my HP3000 and the HP9000 that came soon after.
BTW, HP-UX appeared in 1986 [wanadoo.fr]
Re:pre(1 + announce) (Score:3, Funny)
And, of course, there's the old joke: "If Hewlett-Packard had been named Packard-Hewlett, what would they have called HP-UX?"
HP's policies (Score:1)
It would be nice to know what the reasons where for their decisions. Is it that they are unable to compete with Sun and SGI?
It's not that I like HP-UX either, it's just I'm still using it.
Jonathan
Re:HP's policies (Score:2)
It appears to be more of the recent flushing-out of whatever is perceived as 'old' by the HP mgmt, including the 'old' HP concept of engineering things to run forever if needed. Is frequent downtime supposed to be a 21st century concept???
And, fwiw, I like HP/UX ... I get a lot fewer calls than the NT guys get ;)
Re:HP's policies (Score:2, Funny)
You work in sales?
just because they're being scrapped (Score:1)
I'm sure there will be plenty of them leftover (hp is continuing support for another 5 years anyway, according to the article) so the work that's gone into porting things to it surely hasn't gone to waste.
oh well.....
Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's replace all these crappy old systems (hardware + software) with something more decent. Replace HP3000 with HP9000, Cobol with C++, and EDI with XML.
I for one, think that updating hardware and software every 30 years should be mandatory. Think of all the time lost to update and maintain that crap!
Nostalgia is not for Teckies!!! (except when it concerns Arcade games ;o)
By the way, I don't want to hear about Unix being far older than Windows... Unix is still being developed actively.
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:2)
--Blair
"The business model is probably obsolete anyway."
Re:I hope you're joking (Score:2)
"Databases that can easily be in the gigabyte range" are considered micro databases these days. If Excel and VB don't have the capacity, then just about any other DBMS and GUI will.
--Blair
"Y2K won't be the last bug attributable to 'oh this shit'll never run that long...'"
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
In other words, important stuff that makes the world work, and has had millions of man-hours of development work put into it. These aren't your typical brochureware web sites, coded up in a few days where you can re-boot the server if anything goes wrong. Migrating these applications onto a more modern platform, including all the testing that needs to be done, is a distinctly non-trivial undertaking (these aren't like AS/400 where moving OS/400 applications from 48-bit CISC to 64-bit RISC was all taken care of by a virtual machine layer).
Think of all the time lost to update and maintain that crap!
And rewriting those applications... that's probably never going to happen. You think they're hard to maintain, they will be even more difficult to reverse-engineer when the original coders aren't around and the documentation is sketchy at best. There may not even be complete source code for any of these applications any more. C++ isn't an especially easier language to maintain than COBOL anyway.
We JUST bought one... (Score:2)
Having been in a shop which employed a variety of Pr1me systems, there will undoubtably be 3rd party support for these for years to come. Just expect HP's end of development to grind to a halt.
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:2)
Back in the 1970's, software companies actually tested, and took responsibility for, their software. They also kept fixing things until the actual code started to work the way the documentation (documentation? what's that?) said it would.
I doubt you will find very many organizations with HP3000 code bases who are very excited about moving them to crap... I mean, the latest and greatest new platform.
sPh
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
What prints your paycheck?
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yeah! Kill the damn thing!!! (Score:2)
And e = a.multiply(b.add(c)).divide(d) is no worse (I find my example more readable: a is multiplied by b plus c then divided by d) than temp = a.multiply(b.add(c)); e = temp.divide(d);
spoken: temp is a times b plus c, then e is temp divided by d.
Just personal tastes on that issue, but you are wrong about operator overloading. Granted, I don't do Java development so I'm not sure of the quality of the extensions, but I do know they exist.
For those unfarmiliar... (Score:2, Interesting)
Unlike HP's excellent and unparalleled line of RPN calculators, perhaps these minicomputers actually do belong on the scapheap. I lost my 48sx in college and I'm brokenhearted that I can't replace it.
Re:For those unfarmiliar... (Score:1)
Big pain in the ass (Score:1)
Re:Big pain in the ass (Score:3, Funny)
lots and lots of tapes, and the mother of all perl scripts.
Re:Big pain in the ass (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Big pain in the ass (Score:2)
Re:Big pain in the ass (Score:2)
So if HP was saying the 3000 was a viable datacenter product last year, it is perfectly reasonable for a customer not to start replacement planning. If HP wants to stay in the data center market, that is.
sPh
You've got 5 years, at least... (Score:2, Informative)
It is time to start planning a migration strategy. Evidently there are already some tools available to migrate to other platforms but this might be a good chance for your company to take a step back and reexamine the system as a whole - a rewrite might be in order.
Yeah, and they'll wait until the last 6 months... (Score:2)
Re:You've got 5 years, at least... (Score:2)
I remember that Thompson and Ritchie had many sleepless nights worrying if their OS would survive past 31 January, 1999. Not to mention IBM's concern back in the 60's. And I hear Eckert and Mauchly were very concerned about it back in the 40's and 50's. Even in the 30's Konrad Zuse wanted to know "How should I store dates in mein Komputieren-machinen?". In fact, I'm sure that Babbage was worried sick over the whole thing...
Several decades, indeed (but only for very small values of "several").
Several years, perhaps, but I think hyperbole got the better of you this time.
Re:You've got 5 years, at least... (Score:2)
Not everyone, perhaps, but some people with foresight.
sPh
It was a subject in academia since the late 70's. (Score:2)
People knew about the Y2k "problem" two decades before the drop-dead date. Whether or not businesses were listening is something completely different- why spend all this time and money "fixing" something that's not broke (as in, it's working right now...), right?
Many folks introduction to programing (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Many folks introduction to programing (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Many folks introduction to programing (Score:2)
Oh, the joys of text pinball...
er....
or not!
I must have spent hours typing most of those programs into my 7Kb RAM 750Khz 6502 Microtan 65, 20 years ago...!
David Ahl's BASIC games (Score:2)
Does anyone know if the games are available anywhere in a format that will run on Linux, I'd love to get a set...
Re:David Ahl's BASIC games (Score:3, Interesting)
What a shame (Score:3, Insightful)
BTW, what is the deal with them discontinuing the calculators? I always thought RPN was just about the coolest idea ever for calculators, and I have fond memories of having "calculator races" back in high school where we would see who's machine could solve the problem first. Those of us with the sweet HP calculators were always the first to finish. Truely the end of a great product line.
well (Score:2, Insightful)
Good point - not flamebait (Score:2, Insightful)
The 3000, on the other hand - closed, proprietary, not the most flexible and capable by today's OS standards - is more and more a niche product. Even if it is still profitable for HP today, it won't be over the long haul. It is not HP's future.
HP has talked about retiring the 3000 line for years. As I understand it, they've kept the line this long only because of their commitment to customer service. There are a lot of companies (like ours) that rely on the 3000. It will be expensive to replace.
People who are critical of companies still using 3000s, IMHO, are a little lacking in real-world business experience. We recognized long ago that the 3000's life was limited. We haven't put any major new applications on them in years. Unfortunately, we have millions of lines of existing code supporting several critical lines of business. We can't replace that at a whim. It will be extremely expensive.
As just one example, the Y2K remediation effort for one large application was about 24,000 man-hours. Note that this application was already almost Y2K compliant, designed in the beginning to track century information. For most programs, most of this time was simply the overhead of checking out the source code, reviewing it for compliance, and checking it back in. There were thousands of programs to check.
I agree that HP deserves credit for continuing the line for so many years past its prime, and for providing good advance notice about retiring it. The future is open systems. HP "done good" by easing the transition.
Oh my God! (Score:1)
You bastards!
*whore karma*
It took them sooo long... (Score:2, Funny)
In 1972 and 1973, the early versions [...] were temporarily withdrawn from the market because of flaws [...]
Well, that surely goes in the book of records: it took them 28 years until they decided to make the "temporary" "permanent".
Who gets what ? (Score:2)
Re:Who gets what ? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Who gets what ? (Score:2, Informative)
I think you mistook their discontinuing the VAX line, the hardware that originally ran VMS. VMS also runs on the Alphas, and is still very much actively supported. Though the spirit of both is somewhat the same; the high end non-unix hardware is obsoleted because the performance reasons of having a much less intuitive system are lessened by newer, faster hardware.
Re:Who gets what ? (Score:2)
Re:Who gets what ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Negative. VMS has never been EOLed, although DEC's marketing folks gave it quite a bit of short shrift in favor of NT. If VMS were to be axed, it would truly be a sad day for the industry. I can say without the slightest bit of hyperbole that, in my experience at least, there is not another OS on the market that is even remotely as stable, secure, and scalable (except perhaps IBM's VM or MVS systems, or the Tandem/Compaq NSK/NonStop OS, none of which I have direct experience with). VMS is immune to buffer overflow exploits, and even makes Unix look unstable by comparison. The DoD is heavily dependant upon it for many of their critical systems, as are many banks, credit unions, stock exchanges, and insurance and health care companies.
OpenVMS is currently in the process of being ported to the IA-64 platform (likely the first or second successor to Monroe, which will likely be an Alpha EV8 processor running IA-64 instructions in microcode... Thank goodness Intel finally admitted that they don't know how to design a decent 64-bit processor and brought in the Q's Alpha design engineers. Of course, the Q by the same action were admitting that they had no clue how to market the Alpha.)
Now what's this nonsense about overly long command lines? Any DCL command can be arbitrarily abbreviated provided that enought characters are provided to assure uniqueness...
Re:Who gets what ? (Score:2)
Re:Who gets what ? (Score:2)
The problem is that the organizational overhead to sustain that revenue is humongus -- loads of hardware and software engineers, thousands of support people, etc. In a recessionary economy, Wall Street starts to turn against such businesses.
And that's what HP is up to. I have no doubt that the 3000 was still profitable, but they are dumping it to get lean-n-mean. Same with the 9000s (hello generic IA-64 boxes) and HPUX as soon as they can figure out how.
The reports of HP-UX death ... (Score:2)
This is the HP3000 they're talking about. This means the death of MPE/iX (HP3000), not HP-UX (HP9000, enitrely different OS).
tools, we have no stinkin tools (Score:3, Interesting)
Although I do remember how me and a guy cracked (yes as in warez) a text editor for mpe/xl once. Each 3000 has a serial code that shows up as a read-only environment variable, and a lot of software uses that as a software key. i.e.: if you tried to copy a program to another box, it saw a different serial and said "no, you copyied this". So our hack was to create a slightly different environment variable called HPSUSAM, and store the serial # from the machine we copied the program from. Then we used a binary editor to search through the program for any occurance of "HPSUSAN" and replace with "HPSUSAM". m41nfr4m3 h4>0r1n6 1s 1337.
My first system was an HP2000 (Score:2, Interesting)
Ahhh... I have fond memories of the HP2000A (later 2000F) system back in the mid-1970's at the University of Saskatchewan. Not really a "system" 'cause as soon as you logged in, you were dropped into a BASIC interpreter!
Re:My first system was an HP2000 (Score:2)
Now, where'd I put those ASR-33 paper tapes?
Uphill. Both ways.
Re:My first system was an HP2000 (Score:2)
Yes, my school got a great number of research grants from HP. These were just two of the machines I had to contend with out of the last two years of school where I used no fewer than 10 machines/OS'es/editing systems.
P.S. Am I 1337, yet?
The official word from HP (Score:2, Informative)
kinda sad news (Score:3, Informative)
We've still got several critical apps running on MPE, including our 911 software for PD. These things are bulletproof, and I cringe at the thought of the PD folks going out and choosing an NT solution now. I can only hope a decent 911 app for UX exists.
Re:kinda sad news (Score:2)
I worked on a CAD software selection project a few years back for a large metropolitan police dept. in the US. From what I remember, there were a few vendors that offer Unix solutions include:
Printrak-based on a Tandem platform
Geac-AIX platform, if I remember correctly
Tiburon-various Unix platforms supported
Here's a list of CAD vendors
http://www.ilj.org/CADCOPS/CADVendorsOnWeb.htm
Re:Tandem continued viability ????? (Score:2)
Unfortunately they didn't end up moving forward on the implementation until over a year after I stopped working for them. I still don't know if the system has gone live yet.
Re:kinda sad news (Score:2)
During the course of our work, I found a number of sample RFPs and other such info from the net. Email me at balletto@sprintmail.com if you'd like me to send them to you.
Re:kinda sad news (Score:2)
(OK, that's a bit pollyanna-ish, but if you were that close...)
Ah, the feelings of nostalgia... (Score:2)
I worked with a couple of these systems during my last year of college. I can't say that I'm sad to see them go, as I'm all for "better" (subjective, I know) technology. The box and MPE OS were very stable and they provided me with some very valuable learning experiences early on. Backups using those big reel tapes. Ahhh yes! Those were the days.
So, yeah, onward and upward, but it's still nice to look back now and again. We should definitely remember where we came from.
Why the Compaq logo (Score:2)
blegh (Score:2)
It's sad -- kinda ... (Score:2, Informative)
1.) Learning how much fun the "down" command was as a cheap prank.
2.) Sending messages from the consoles to newer newbies that their terminal was about to explode.
3.) Mystery Mansion
4.) The Land of Warp -- and I don't care what Adventureland says (http://www.lysator.liu.se/adventure/), Warp was weeks of fun.
Of course, when the AC went out at my school, the nicely cooled server room was a favorite place. Oh yeah -- and I think I still owe my school $376.58 for the service call when I downed the console. It seemed clever at the time.
At least I wasn't the one who hit the Emergency Stop button
Now I suppose where the "kinda" comes in is
Warp (Score:2)
-russ
Linux Killer App - HP 3000 Emulator (Score:5, Interesting)
Just think of it, there are thousands of big companies using the HP3000 looking for a solution over the next 5 years (when HP ends support). HP will probably try some god-awful ports to the 9000 series, but if it's not broke, just emulate it. After all, millions of man hours have been invested in getting those programs to handle mission-critical applications.
When someone writes this, let me know... my company has a large pile of cash ready for them.
Re:Linux Killer App - HP 3000 Emulator (Score:2)
Yes, I'm looking for a job. I will write your emulator for money.
I thought the reliability was partly the hardware. (Score:2)
I was under the impression that it wasn't just the MPE OS that was part of the stability equation, but also the hardware that HP built for these things - at the time I didn't really pay much attention to the hardware specs as I was just trying to get some software working on that system so I can't give exact details.
It seems to me that "rock-solid reliability at commodity hardware prices" is rather an ironic phrase, and I'm not sure is possible...
However, I think that other than that point you have a great idea! People will need to migrate from these boxes and it would be good to have a Linux upgrade path, at least for the mid-term.
Re: (Score:2)
20+ years ago... (Score:2)
Once I managed to write a chat program that used the message command, but the only time I seriously tried to use it, I couldn't get the guy on the other side to understand the concept of typing in his session ID instead of his logon ID.
This was also the machine on which I first discovered Crowther & Wood's Adventure. Somewhere in a box in storage I still have the printouts of my sessions on it.
Then the school got this stupid TI refrigerator-looking mini which crashed whenever someone turned off a terminal. But I never got to mess with that one.
Re:20+ years ago... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Shedding A Tear (Score:5, Interesting)
My career was made by these machines, although I saw the writing on the wall quite a while back and moved on. I worked for a number of companies that used 3000's (and probably still do in some form or fashion) including a long stint as a 3000 field software engineer with HP itself.
The system aged as gracefully as any computer in history, and was based on boring old dependability, much like the company itself used to be. Between this, the instrument/medical division (now Agilent) and calculators, it feels a little like the heart of the company has been removed.
I was fortunate enough to see the very first HP inkjet (in a little case that the Boise division guy practically handcuffed to his wrist), but had no idea how big it would end up being to the company.
I know there is little room for sentimentality in the computer world, but I have just as strong nostalgic feelings for these old beasties as any vintage video game. They are certainly deserving of respect.
If Linux is around 30 years from now, I think many of you (us) would have some sad feelings if the last copy were being deleted. Even if it was being replaced with something "better".
Should I burn the MPE source code fiche, in tribute?
Smilodon
V V
Re:Shedding A Tear (Score:2)
My eventual migration to an AS/400 environment has been a painful one - MPE is wonderfully straightforward and functional. It (along with Powerhouse, Suprtool, and other fine tools) will be missed!
HP is dead (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Shedding A Tear 2xHP9000-1HP9000+1HP3000 (Score:2)
We're moving from 2 HP9000 servers to 1 HP9000 and 1 HP3000. This dictated by the software we'll be running. I expect all applications will, over the next 5 years be ported to something else.
What a title for the subject (Score:2, Funny)
1) HP is about to commit a horrible crime: "kill"
2) There are exactly 3000 unites to be killed: "3000 System"
3) HP will do it 30 years from now: "After 30 years"
Actually Loved Mine (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm shedding real tears over this.
Today, MPE has web services, ethernet support, and all the other modern trappings... except instability.
My MPE system maintained uptime in the YEARS... regularly... the OS never failed. Once in a long while (every couple of years) a 10 year old drive would fail & we'd have to deal with it. Because we never bothered to upgrade from the HPIB drives to SCSI, hot swap wasn't an option. But... I will note... it is said that you could upgrade the kernel on these w/o ever rebooting.
If vendors made systems as stable as this today, the world would not know what to do with itself.
-jbn
(Anyone in DC interested in doing a wake / memorial service?)
Re:Actually Loved Mine (Score:2)
A couple years ago, I saw a service order for a 3000. The TCP/IP networking was called "ARPANET PAK" and the NIC being installed was a 10Base2 (thinnet). I guess that's modern enough
Upgrading the kernel... (Score:2)
Errr, no. Upgrading MPE was always a convoluted process, requiring rebooting.
My first job was programming on HP 3000s (Score:2, Interesting)
File locking for one. I'm sorry, but the unix notion of locking a file is a joke. "I'll create this here lock file, and then other programs that see the lock will know not to open my file. I sure hope the other programs agree to play nice."
Give me a break. In MPE the locking mechanism is built into the file system, and is enforced by the OS. It is easy to build complex locks like "lock bytes 7643-8126 for exclusive write access" and then other programs can do whatever they want with the other parts of the file, and they can read the locked part, but only you can write. *Very* useful for databases.
Another thing the 3000s excel at is stability. I can honestly say that in the 4 years I worked at Bradmark, the only time our development machine ever had any instability was when we ran a beta version of the OS one time for some testing. I once saw an hp3000 ad that actually advertised their machines as having "99.999%" uptime. They had no worries about false advertising, because it wasn't false.
And on the rare occasions when something does go wrong, these machines are designed from the get go to recover gracefully without user intervention. In addition to their external UPS, each machine has an internal battery. This battery isn't for maintaining main power, rather it just maintains RAM, for up to 8 hours or more. When main power is restored the system does a self diagnostic, rolls back in disk IO that had been interrupted, reconnects to any dumb terminals (widely used when the 3000 was first designed), and restarts all programs! If you had a system where all users connect through terminals, then you could sit there and watch all of those terminals come back to life with their programs running exactly where they were when power failed.
Now that's reliability folks!
Someone I worked with told me his favorite 3000 war story: there was a brief power failure in his building during the middle of the day, but power came back on fairly quickly. At 5:00pm the 3000 sysadmins all made a point of walking by the computer room and saying things like "Gee did the power go out?" for the benefit of the Unix admins who were still checking their filesystems and trying to recover their machines.
If you're out there Chris: "Hi!" *waves*
Re: (Score:2)
Profits of Doom? (Score:2, Funny)
The profits of doom?
Damn, buying evil geniuses in a nutshell [oreilly.com] has finally paid off!
Announcement From The Future? (Score:2)
From the CSL page:
A very strange thing happened on Wednesday, November 14th. At 11:00 am Pacific Time, hewlett-packard announced that they had decided to discontinue sales and support of the hp e3000 platform. Winston Prather, General Manager, hp e3000 Business, made the announcement with Jim Murphy, General Manager, hp Server Support at his side. [bold added]
The thing is, I'm typing this at 9:49 AM Pacific time.
Curious.
Steve M
Yahoooooo!!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yahoooooo!!!! (Score:2)
sPh
VMS is next after merger (Score:2)
Renew!! Renew!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Time for Carousel.
Re:Renew!! Renew!!! (Score:2)
Re:Renew!! Renew!!! (Score:2)
If you get it, it's probably carousel time for you too
Owch.
Reliability (Score:2)
Not to mention that most of these systems will be replaced with ones having a more "northwestern" feel :-(.
My first job... (Score:2)
It had an unusual stack-based architecture, and a very nice close-to-the-hardware programming language call SPL/3000, derived from Algol60.
What's going to be left at HP... (Score:2)
Coming from an HP3000 refugee... (Score:3, Interesting)
In a previous life I did HP3000 development. Ahhhh the memor^H^H^H^H^Hnightmares...
Yes, the HP3000 hardware and OS (MPE/iX) are supremely stable. However everything is also supremely expensive, and performance isn't very good.
The last few years MPE has desperately been playing catch-up with the modern Unix world. The development tools on the HP3000 are horribly archaic -- much worse than even ancient Unixes. The default native MPE environment doesnt even have a fullscreen text editor! At least you get 'vi' with Unix. The OS was riddled with anachronisms at least as many levels deep as Dante's hell. You think Unix is archaic? You ain't seen MPE, baby. It makes VMS look brand spanking new.
The (relatively) recent attempts to bring HP3000 up to speed didn't really work out that well. Adding a POSIX subsystem was cute, but not terribly useful. POSIX stuff could see everything on the MPE side (files, etc), but MPE applications couldn't easily access POSIX data. In the end it was like having two mutually exclusive OSes on the same box. They could co-exist but couldnt really usefully share data.
The HP3000 filesystem is both a blessing and a curse -- the record oriented filesystem can be extremely cumbersome at times when you're used to the rest of the world dealing with simple streams of bytes. Trying to ship data between HP3000 and the real world can be a real hair-pulling experience. Even Macs don't usually have it as bad.
I pity those companies that bet the farm on HP3000's. They may have several years before support is cut off -- but porting tens of millions of lines of code, much of it SPL (basically a macro assembler), is going to be a herculean effort. In many cases it's going to be easier to just start from scratch.
I guess I'm just glad I got out when I did
Re:Coming from an HP3000 refugee... (Score:2)
And SPL-II was even cuter. I did some hacking on a full-screen editor written in SPL-II called VDX aka VOODOO. I still have a listing of it dated July 22, 1983.
And yes, yes, the record oriented filesystem was a piece of crap. They should have gone to a stream of bytes with a record emulation layer.
-russ
gspl?! (Score:3, Insightful)
A lot of SPL code I've seen is selfmodifying code. This means pushing old (pre-parisc) opcodes onto the compatibility mode stack and executing them.
Don't forget that a lot of SPL code depends on intricate details of the compatibility mode linker, too.
In the end, if you were going to do a gspl you'd basically have to end up writing a compatiblity mode VM as well.
Even HP didn't get the CM VM 100% perfect when they went to PA-RISC. CM code still sometimes mysteriously vomits (or maybe its on purpose, part of evil scheme to get you to port your code to native mode
Don't forget the complexity of writing a VM to fully emulate the intricate block-mode oriented terminal I/O... even commercial terminal emulation software like Reflections don't always get this quite right...
I don't think it would be an easy job at all. You could make a bundle off it though, selling it to corporations desperate to keep their HP3K investments afloat...
Super reliable yes . Missed no. (Score:2, Interesting)
Unless you tried to use that complete screw up of an application 20/20 . Does anyone else remember that botched attempt at a spreadsheet app ?
I recall 20/20 bringing down the HP3000 at least twice before it was dumped.
What people tend to forget is that the 3000 and the OS were reliable and yes , I can recall instances of my terminal coming 'back up' right where I left off....but the 3000's that are around today are largely accessed via PC terminal apps (reflection etc) thereby exposing reliability to all the vagaries of MS desktops and all the network glitches that come with the 'No dumb terminal' approach.
From an end user perspective anyway
Re:An Idea (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:dumb question (Score:2)