PACX
{{Short description|Family of data switching products}}
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{{about|computer network equipment|the airport|Coldfoot Airport|the autonomous glider|PacX Wave Glider}}
PACX (Private Automatic Computer eXchange) was a name given by Gandalf Technologies to their family of data switching products.{{cite web | title=Gandalf PACX Family of Private Automatic Computer X |publisher=Columbia University in the City of New York | url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/gandalf-pacx-iv.pdf | access-date=2025-03-25}}{{cite book | last=Voyer | first=Roger | last2=Ryan | first2=Patti | title=The New Innovators | publisher=James Lorimer & Company | date=1994-01-01 | isbn=978-1-55028-463-8 | page=187}}
Architecture
The PACX was a centralized switch that allowed serial connections from end users to be connected to any one of a number of computers, typically mainframes. Users were equipped with small boxes with two thumbwheels on them, and by rolling the wheels to a given two-digit number they could select among the machines connected to the PACX. In typical setups, the PACX would be connected to computer terminals or modems.{{cite web | title=Gandalf SAM 201 modem · York University Computer Museum Canada | website=York University Computer Museum Canada | date=2025-03-25 | url=https://museum.eecs.yorku.ca/items/show/343 | access-date=2025-03-25}} The switch box would be queried on connection for the user's selection, and then a direct connection would be made between the user and that machine. The system was not unlike the telephone network, and the name PACX was deliberately chosen to suggest a computer-side analog of the PABX market:False.
Background
The PACX, with its mainframe utility, was part of an era in which enterprise data services were seen to the province of an Office Controller. The Office Controller was envisaged as a central switch which would interconnect and create all applications and make them available to users. PABX manufacturers of that era (the 1980s) created suites of data applications for the connection of users to mainframe applications. There were even magazine articles touting the victory of the PABX as an Office Controller over its LAN rivals. The PACX was a data PABX without the voice capability.
With the development of LANs and cheap PCs with their attendant client/server applications, the Office Controller vision faded away. However the idea is not without merit. It is being re-established in new guises with the development of SIP with Session Border Controllers and Service Oriented Architectures.
References
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External links
- [http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/pacxbox.html Columbia University computer history page on PACX]
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