Datacomputer
{{Short description|Database utility on the ARPANET}}
The Datacomputer was an ARPANET-connected database system supported by the Computer Corporation of America in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was intended as a computing utility sharing resources among multiple ARPA projects, in particular in seismology and climatology. It operated from August 1973"Arpanet DBMS Uses Decsystem-10, Mass Memory", Computerworld, May 9th 1977 until 1980.{{cn|date=December 2019}}
It was hosted on a DEC PDP-10 running the TENEX operating system (ARPANET host CCA-TENEX, address 31)Elizabeth J. Feinler, ed., Arpanet Resources Handbook, October 1978, NTIS AD-A065 421, [https://books.google.com/books?id=XxveYHLCcKoC&pg=PA161 p. 161-162] and was designed to support 3 trillion bits of storage (375 GB). Besides storage, the Datacomputer also offered data conversion utilities which supported the multiple data formats used at the time.Janet Abbate, Inventing the Internet, p. 98-99, 103-104
The largest user of the Datacomputer was ARPA's Seismic Data Analysis Center (SDAC) (Alexandria, Virginia), which monitored underground nuclear tests.
The Datacomputer manipulated data using a custom Datalanguage.Richard Winter, Jeffrey Hill, Warren Greiff, "Further Datalanguage Design Concepts", Network Working Group RFC 610, December 1973, [https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc610.txt full text] A sample retrieval request:
OPEN RESULTLIST ;
OPEN WEATHER ;
FOR WEATHER.STATION WITH REGION EQ 'MASSACHUSETTS'
FOR RESULTLIST.RESULT, OBSERVATION WITH TEMPERATURE.MAX GT '300' /* DEGREES KELVIN */
RESULT.CITY = STATION.CITY ;
RESULT.DATE = OBSERVATION.DATE ;
RESULT.TEMPERATURE = OBSERVATION.TEMPERATURE ;
END ;
END;
The Datacomputer hardware had a three-level store: primary core, secondary hard disk, and tertiary mass storage. At the time, disk cost about $20/megabit, while mass stores, typically robotic magnetic tape systems, cost about $1/megabit. The service started in 1973 with disk storage only; tertiary storage using Ampex's Terabit Memory System (TMS) hardware, based on videotape technology, was to come on line in 1975.Thomas Marill, Dale Stern, "The datacomputer—A network data utility", AFIPS '75 Proceedings, National Computer Conference, May 19-22, 1975, Anaheim, California, {{doi|10.1145/1499949.1500025}}, p. 389-395 In 1979, TMS's capacity was 175 billion bits (22 GB), and the total data stored was over 500 billion bits (62 GB)Donald E. Eastlake III, Matthew Maltzman, Joanne Z. Sattley, Steven A. Zimmerman, "Datacomputer and SIP Operations: Semi-Annual Technical Report", Computer Corporation of America Technical report CCA-79-22, July 31, 1979 [https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a075469.pdf at DTIC]
Notes
External links
- [https://www.saildart.org/FTP.MSG%5B1,LES%5D2 Email thread at Stanford AI Lab about the Datacomputer, 1976-1978]