

Central Research Institute for Physics, Budapest, Hungary, DECUS Number 8-721, June 1977. Liberty Mutual Research Center, Hopkinton, MA. Modified by Davis on Januand Mamodified by Torbjorn Alm, Autocode AB, on submitted to DECUS by Robert Hassinger,
#Pdp 11 emulator mac code
Facilities for writing own code in assembler to be added to the interpreter for evaluation of special functions are provided for." OS/8 file input and output is allowed, which enables the user to prepare LISP programs using OS/8 EDIT. LISP 1.5 Interpreter for PDP-8 with OS/8. The documentation suggests they used a modified PAL assembler to build this and that must have been the case as I haven't had much luck getting it to assemble." Josh notes: "Attached are paper-tape images these were punched with bit 8 set so to get useful text out you'll need to strip that off.
#Pdp 11 emulator mac archive
Gift of Josh Dersh, LIVING COMPUTERS museum + labs.zip archive This is less flexible and leads to irreconciliable differences between LISP 1.5 and LISP-8, but it is more efficient for a small computer such as a PDP-8." "The operating system is relatively small, and programs require less space since a distinction is made between program and data. Submitted by Ernest Hayden, Speech Communications Research Laboratory, Santa Barbara, California, DECUS Number 8-341, December 16, 1970. Van der Poel was the designer of the early Stantec ZEBRA computer, and van der Mey implemented ALGOL and LISP for the ZEBRA. Technical University of Delft, The Netherlands, DECUS Number 8-102a, May 1968.

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