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#11
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Here is another picture of the bottom corner, note the name.
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#12
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Wow, that looks nothing but extremely valueble, & fun to play with!
__________________
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#13
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<Drooling> Wow! Very kewl...
--T
__________________
Jam the computer...trash every lethal machine in the land! --Timothy Leary _____________________________________________ Please visit the Vintage-Computer Wiki. Contributers welcome. |
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#14
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I know this thread is a little old for a reply, but I just came across it... I first saw the Bi-Tran Six in about 1971-72 -- I was in fifth grade at the time. Our local school district had two of them, and I was invited to view a demonstration of the machines as I was interested in computers. When I was in eleventh grade, I took a computer programming class, and the same two Bi-Trans were still in use, and were one of the machine types we were required to write programs for. It was my first exposure to Octal numbering, as the six bits were typically grouped as a word consisting of two, three-bit nibbles. If I remember correctly, the op-codes were also documented as Octal. The Bi-Tran couldn't do much, but the lights gave you a good view of what was happening in the registers. I still contend that understanding this machine gave you a good background for programming many types of simple embedded microprocessors -- I think this machine may have a Harvard architecture. The last I saw of the two Bi-Trans was in the mid 1980s, when they could have been mine for the asking -- unfortunately, I didn't ask -- I suspect they ended up as dumpster fodder along with a PDP-8...
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#15
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Ooooooo, I just love lights on the front. Reason I loved the IBM 1130, it had tons o' lights.
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#16
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and the op.manual also.... www.iavalley.cc.ia.us/~thatcher
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#17
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When I was in the Navy, going through electronics school (one of them, I can't remember which) in Millington, Tennessee, somewhere between September 1977 and September 1978, we were taught about computers using a computer trainer called the "ComTran-10", or something like that.
I don't remember much about it, except we programmed it in machine code. Has anyone heard of it?
__________________
Remember, no matter where you go... there you are! |
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#18
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Hi..I have a Bi-tran-six..complete with printer and punch tape system..
yes it sill works..thanks dean t...641-782-5865 My web site http://www.iavalley.cc.ia.us/~thatcher/ |
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#19
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I actually trained on one in the early 70's for the navy. Fun pulling out transistors and replacing them.
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#20
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I used the Bitran Six in Polaris Electronics "A" school for basic digital computer programming and troubleshooting training in 1972. It was a very basic computer, limited in function, but good for introduction to basic programming and troubleshooting. The last I saw of these computers, they were piled in an old classroom at the Submarine School in Groton, CT. Have fun with it!
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