~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Big Altair ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Despite some recent setbacks, (a story for another day,) I must acknowledge that I have a pretty darned good job. Which I possibly don't deserve, and for which I am rather grateful. For example, one of my projects at work is developing and curating a collection of old computers and software. Yes, that's right: I get paid (partly) to do retrocomputing, and I have a nice, well equipped lab space in the basement of our University Library to store and display the collection. True, I don't own these computers, but since I can visit them anytime I want to it hardly matters. Last week was pretty momentous. We took delivery of a couple of restored Altairs, an 8800 (now much improved from the original) and an 8800b. Getting the Altairs repaired had been on my to-do list since 2016 when they were first donated to the collection, but it took years to find someone willing and able to do the job, and then more years while he undertook the painstaking labour necessary to restore the two dusty hulks to a beautifully functional state. I'll put a couple of links at the bottom for anyone who wants more details of what all needed to be done, but let's just say it took a heck of a lot of highly skilled work. After dropping off the Altairs, our contractor Brent spent a couple of hours with me going over what he had done, starting with the fully rebuilt power supply (on the 8800) and the cooling requirements (mostly spacing the cards far enough apart so they can radiate heat, but also a fan) and then moving on to the various S100 cards plugged into the backplane, including one with custom ROMs with a monitor and some simple blinky-light programs, doing I/O with the switches and blinking lights on the front panel and then interacting with a monitor program over a serial connection. All in all, a memorable day. Later that week I joined a small group of colleagues for a tour of the campus data center, a purpose-built warehouse-like facility dedicated mostly to research computing. And as the tour guide led us past the giant and deadly power systems, the multiple redundant cooling systems, and the banks of computers plugged into racks, status lights blinking away, I had the odd thought that in some sense I was walking around inside a really big Altair. The fundamentals were similar - power, heat dissipation, compute 'modules' - it's just the scale and capacity were a bit different. As insights go ... well, it amused me briefly, but one probably wouldn't want to make too much of it. I suspect it's the sort of insight one might arrive at should one happen to be in an altered state, so to speak ("it's just a big Altair, man!"). But I don't really do that sort of thing and certainly not at work. Just some idle woolgathering, is all. -------------------------------------------------- http://madrona.ca/e/altair8800i/index.html http://madrona.ca/e/altair8800b/index.html