VAX$500222$ - traduction vers Anglais
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VAX$500222$ - traduction vers Anglais

FAMILY OF MINICOMPUTERS BY DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION
VAX-11/780; VAX-11/750; VAX-750; VAX 11/750; VAX 11/780; VAX-11/785
  • VAX-11/751
  • A VAX-11/780 CPU backplane

VAX      
Vax, kleine computer van Digital-concern (DEC), virtuele adres uitbreiding
Virtual Memory System         
  • VAXstation 4000 model 96 running OpenVMS V6.1, DECwindows Motif and the [[NCSA Mosaic]] browser
  • OpenVMS Alpha V8.4-2L1, showing the DCL CLI in a terminal session
  • The architecture of the OpenVMS operating system, demonstrating the layers of the system, and the access modes in which they typically run
  • VWS 4.5 running on top of VAX/VMS V5.5-2
  • Stylized "VAX/VMS" used by Digital
  • DECwindows XUI window manager running on top of VAX/VMS V5.5-2
  • The "Grey Wall" of VAX/VMS documentation, at [[Living Computers: Museum + Labs]]
  • access-date=January 24, 2021}}</ref>
COMPUTER OPERATING SYSTEM
Virtual Memory System; Openvms; Vax/vms; VAX/VMS; DECwindows; Open VMS; Open vms; VMS (operating system); DECWindows; VMS Software Inc; OpenVMS 7.2; MicroVMS; DEC VMS; VMS operating system; VAX-VMS; Spiralog
virtueel geheugen systeem, methode voor vergroten van verouderd geheugen door gebruikmaking van harde diskette

Définition

VAX
Virtual Address eXtension (Reference: DEC, VAX)

Wikipédia

VAX-11

The VAX-11 is a discontinued family of 32-bit superminicomputers, running the Virtual Address eXtension (VAX) instruction set architecture (ISA), developed and manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC). Development began in 1976. In addition to being powerful machines in their own right, they also offer the additional ability to run user mode PDP-11 code (thus the -11 in VAX-11), offering an upward compatible path for existing customers.

The first machine in the series, the VAX-11/780, was announced in October 1977. Its former competitors in the minicomputer space, like Data General and Hewlett-Packard, were unable to successfully respond to the introduction and rapid update of the VAX design. DEC followed the VAX-11/780 with the lower-cost 11/750, and the even lower cost 11/730 and 11/725 models in 1982. More powerful models, initially known as the VAX-11/790 and VAX-11/795, were instead rebranded as the VAX 8600 series.

The VAX-11 line was discontinued in 1988, having been supplanted by the MicroVAX family on the low end, and the VAX 8000 family on the high end. The VAX-11/780 is historically one of the most successful and studied computers in history.