The Rise and Fall of the digital group

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  • Опубліковано 12 бер 2021
  • #hobby #z80 #vintagecomputer In 1974 Dr. Robert Suding and Richard Bemis of Colorado embarked on an adventure many pioneers of the computing industry attempted (and failed): to hit it big in the brand new personal computer industry. With innovative products and a plucky attitude, they saw initial success, only to end up as so many small microcomputer firms did - gone before the dawn of the 1980s. This documentary follows the rise and fall of the digital group, pioneers of the fledgling microcomputer industry.
    00:36 - Act I - In the Beginning
    03:55 - Experimenting with 'bugs'
    05:03 - Another light blinker
    06:35 - Hal Singer and the Mark-8
    08:18 - Act II - Meet the digital group
    10:07 - The CPU independent bus
    12:19 - Five Flavors of CPU
    14:26 - Sharp Dressed Computers
    15:08 - The tape drive that thinks it's a floppy - The PhiDeck
    17:03 - The Mini-Bytemaster
    18:00 - Trouble in Paradise
    20:54 - Act III - Great is the Fall
    24:30 - digital group spies
    24:42 - An awkward encounter
    27:21 - Coda for the digital group
    Opheliea's Blues by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    Artist: audionautix.com/
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 181

  • @TechTimeTraveller
    @TechTimeTraveller  3 роки тому +96

    Sorry for the long delay! This 30 minute video took nearly a month of evenings and weekends to produce, which I really didn't see coming (although perhaps I should have!). I've been a fan of digital group for years and really wanted to try my best to do it justice. I enjoy doing documentaries but they require a ton of research, finding video material, editing and green screen silliness, and this video was no exception. Regrettably there is very little in the way of detailed accounts of the company; most 1st hand info comes from Dr. Suding, so some grains of salt should be taken. Anyway, thanks for watching, hope you enjoy and on to the next project!

    • @rynz_2893
      @rynz_2893 2 роки тому +3

      im a little late to the party here but I just wanted to say excellent work. this was super interesting

    • @jj74qformerlyjailbreak3
      @jj74qformerlyjailbreak3 2 роки тому +1

      This is the best digital group video on YT.
      Thanks for your hard work.

    • @paulie-g
      @paulie-g 2 роки тому

      Whatever effort you went to, it was well worth it. Absolutely fantastic. Great, new material about a hardware house that is undeservedly less known. Your enthusiasm is infectious.

    • @peterholst8875
      @peterholst8875 2 роки тому +1

      I know that a lot of work have gone into this video, and sometimes most of the credit goes to the part that was the easiest to make...
      But I have to tell you that the acting and reuse of the same actor in the same scene, is SO well done! And so fitting to the good narrator voice! It is funny without being cringe.

    • @jj74qformerlyjailbreak3
      @jj74qformerlyjailbreak3 2 роки тому

      J11. My all time favorite process. 60pin Dip.

  • @Starphot
    @Starphot 2 роки тому +21

    Thanks! I knew Dr. Robert Suding as an innovator in the amateur astronomy field as a maker of a 20" binocular telescope using two matched 20" mirrors. He was in the loop with telescope building and other things with a telescope maker Jim Burr of JMI from the 1990's through the aughts. JMI went out of business several years ago.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому +4

      He was such an intelligent, inventive guy. I wish I had had the chance to meet him before he passed.

  • @tlafeir
    @tlafeir 3 роки тому +114

    You deserve more subs. Your research production value, and narration style is on par with lgr, etc. awesome video

    • @DrGooseDuckman
      @DrGooseDuckman 2 роки тому +1

      I second this.

    • @Patrick-857
      @Patrick-857 2 роки тому +1

      Videos have way more views than subs, and lots of recent views. Seems like the algorithm is smiling on this channel.

    • @koobert
      @koobert 2 роки тому

      The algorithm found him!

    • @CaptHoborg
      @CaptHoborg 2 роки тому

      Flattering but untrue

    • @gworfish
      @gworfish 2 роки тому

      Don't tell him that. Tell all your friends.

  • @peterberbee
    @peterberbee 2 роки тому +6

    Thanks for the history. I built a computer for myself out of a Heurikon MLP-8080 and a Digital Group video card with a debugger/loader of my own making. The video card was by far the best available for a reasonable cost at the time (‘78 or ‘79). Video display was a modified 9 inch TV. Sadly I lost the MLP-8080 when I loaned it back to Heurikon so that they could service customer equipment a decade or so later. The rest of the machine got lost with time, except for the isolation transformer used to prevent electrocution from the TV. I still use that part today and it reminds me of when I was young as did this video.

  • @williamharris8367
    @williamharris8367 3 роки тому +35

    I really enjoy hearing about the history of these early firms -- it is nice to cover something rather more obscure, too. Thank-you!

  • @ReverendTed
    @ReverendTed 2 роки тому +8

    I decided to watch this (after The UA-cam Algorithm dropped your Brick Fraud video in my lap) because I still have a digital Starion 919. I didn't realize that digital and "the digital group" were different entities.
    Still an entertaining and informational video. Thanks!

  • @lelandclayton5462
    @lelandclayton5462 3 роки тому +18

    This got me thinking. The Micro Computer days are still around but evolved into a different format. Instead of 8bit CPUs, TTL or CMOS there are Micro Controllers, Single Board Computers and FPGAs.
    For example FPGA being the huge corporation expensive stuff that many people can't afford while Single Board Computers and Micro Controllers for the Hobbyist. Instead of BASIC there is Python.

  • @landondyer
    @landondyer 2 роки тому +25

    I really enjoyed this bit of history. Very well done, thank you.
    I still have my DG system (26K, dual phidecks). I learned a hell of a lot building that thing, it was a pretty cool system for the time.
    In 1982 or so I met Dr. Suding; I drove to his house in Virginia and bought some hardware from him. He really didn't want to talk much about DG.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому +7

      No problem and thank you for watching. Does your dg system have the nice chassis? I do hope to get my phideck unit going one day.. I've been debating having two more holes cut in the top to permit four decks. It looks like the bottom has the mounts.. they just didn't cut the additional holes up top.
      That's awesome that you met Dr. Suding. I wish I could have met him but sadly did not. I understand in his later years he was more willing to discuss dg. I would guess only 3 years after it's collapse he probably wasn't keen to talk about it. :)

    • @landondyer
      @landondyer 2 роки тому +5

      @@TechTimeTraveller I have the nice chassis, yes. The DG systems were the cadillacs of the late 70s microcomputers, it's too bad they were so expensive to make.
      The phidecks were always kind of terrible. Might try some of the fixes that have been proposed for it.
      In 1981 or so, one of my cow-orkers at the Bureau of Standards (in the DC area) was a guy named Chuck , who had led the DG Software group. He really didn't want to talk about DG much, either. :-)

    • @paulie-g
      @paulie-g 2 роки тому +6

      In a way, it's understandable he didn't want to talk about DG. Dr. Suding comes across as an engineer's engineer who put his heart and soul into the hardware he designed and built. Having it all collapse because the supposed "business guy" wasn't actually any good at business while possibly leaving customers high and dry must have been terrifically traumatic for him.

  • @QuintusCunctator
    @QuintusCunctator 3 роки тому +17

    Thank you for sharing with us this unknown piece of history! The time and effort is very much appreciated.

  • @blkfngrs636
    @blkfngrs636 2 роки тому +10

    man you nailed it. innovative products from complete assholes. i baught/assembled my system day one, and it set me on a computer science path, so a good life investment. first full z80 pc platform, tape bootstrap was great, floppy controller worked well, votrex speech synth was groundbreaking. and their bus and power supply setup was superior to others, but they were too late/slow to take the market. i use lucky to complete mine before they blew up, and did not really count on them, and there was a "handened" user group that made/traded/sold unsponsored products years after...

  • @marksmith9566
    @marksmith9566 2 роки тому +11

    We had a Digital Group with Oasis multiuser system with several terminals attached. It has an 80 MByte Hard Drive as the main storage. Long gone when IBM appeared.

  • @tpcdude
    @tpcdude 2 роки тому +8

    Love to see this inside look at the company's history .. also a pause at the auction listing shows where Denver was at the time "flopies" and other spelling errors went unnoticed.

  • @lampdevil
    @lampdevil 2 роки тому +5

    This was a great watch! Not only a thorough go-over of the company itself, but very illuminating about what it was like to be involved with personal computing at the time. My knowledge and system experiences only went as far back as ancient IBM PCs and clones and the C-64. Knowing about the spirit of the computer user groups of the 70s and the things they made and sold gives so much further context to things I'd half-known and barely understood. Your videos are great and I am still eagerly diving through the archives! Thank you so much for your work.

  • @binarydinosaurs
    @binarydinosaurs 2 роки тому +11

    As a user (and abuser I guess) of DEC kit from the early 80s onwards I was mighty surprised and confused the first time I came across a Digital Group machine 15 or so years ago. There wasn't a lot of info around at the time so thanks for filling in all the questions I had back then! I still don't understand how DEC let them get away with the name though.

    • @rw-xf4cb
      @rw-xf4cb 2 роки тому +1

      Guess in those days they were often seen more as DEC (possibly as marketing to match IBM?) than digital which came in later.

    • @jonathanbeeson8614
      @jonathanbeeson8614 2 роки тому +4

      Regarding the name there was also Digital Research, the developers of the CP/M OS for microcomputers. I guess these companies just weren't as uptight about similar names as so many are today.

  • @ct92404
    @ct92404 3 роки тому +18

    I really enjoyed watching this! I learned a lot from your research, and all the little skits going on in the background were hilarious! It's obvious that you put a tremendous amount of work into making the video, and it definitely paid off. Keep up the good work!

  • @nonsochestofacendo
    @nonsochestofacendo 3 роки тому +6

    Thanks for another interesting video! I'm more into 80s early 90s computers but i really enjoy the story of this older technology! Thanks again.

  • @_B_K_
    @_B_K_ Рік тому +1

    I'm so happy that Adrian mentioned your channel in one of his recent videos. Incredible content -- thank you.

  • @FullMetalFab
    @FullMetalFab 2 роки тому +2

    Is there a site that lists all the info on building a Mark 8 from scratch ? I can't even find a digital copy of the July 1974 Radio Electronics magazine on the web.

  • @shumpmaker8438
    @shumpmaker8438 2 роки тому

    You ever just accidentally find the EXACT youtube channel youve been looking for? These are all so good and to complete, its BLOWS MY MIND that youre sub-20k subscribers.

  • @asteroidrules
    @asteroidrules 2 роки тому +1

    That tape deck system is something else, I didn't realize that sort of memory access in tape drives was ever available in the consumer space. I'd heard of industrial computers which had similar access using tape reels but I assumed that diskettes had taken over before anyone tried it on home microcomputers.

  • @jSyndeoMusic
    @jSyndeoMusic 2 роки тому +2

    Wild… I lived in Denver for a couple of years, and used to ride on a bike trail that apparently went right by 585 S Jason St, their former office building.
    I never would’ve known. I wonder how many other stories like this there are, the stories that the buildings and places around us have that we don’t know.

  • @robertd8224
    @robertd8224 Рік тому

    Love your video. I was a member of the Homebrew Computer Club in the 70's. Loved my Digital Group Computer that I built. It had a huge power supply. The lights would dim in my apartment when ever I turned it on.

  • @randywatson8347
    @randywatson8347 2 роки тому +1

    So awesome to see personal computers at the roots of the 70's.
    The designs looks very sleek!

  • @haweater1555
    @haweater1555 2 роки тому +2

    15:40 How awesome it must have felt for the 70s hobbyist to watch (and hear, and feel) their quad-cassette drive system randomly access files.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому +1

      I really, really want to get something like this working. I have the dual deck. The quad deck is vanishingly rare. The dual deck has the mounting points inside for 4 drives but just doesn't have the holes up top cut out. It's tempting to get a pro to cut them out. I think it would be incredible to see something like that operate... just because it's tape!

  • @medes5597
    @medes5597 2 місяці тому

    Man, I hope you end up doing more videos like this or the miniscribe video. I come back to both so often.
    Not that I don't love the other videos, but these ones are special

  • @1sonyzz
    @1sonyzz 2 роки тому +1

    Yet here we are, in this day and age with computers in our pockets running on none other than micro processors which then people were skeptical about.

  • @earlyburg
    @earlyburg Рік тому

    "...manually program a bootstrap loader". Now we have cell phones and VR headsets. Good job guys and thanks.

  • @mewintle
    @mewintle 2 роки тому +1

    Fantastic! Really seems like the inspiration for the amazing “Halt and Catch Fire” series.

    • @medes5597
      @medes5597 Рік тому

      According to the creators they didn't know about Digital Group until after they'd done the first season. They based it on Osborne and Compaq, with bits of others thrown in (particularly Digital Research, as Gordon was heavily based on Garry Kildall). It's definitely super close though. Even if it's apparently coincidental.

  • @caseyjones1999
    @caseyjones1999 2 роки тому

    I feel like I'm watching a Ken Burns documentary on PBS, this is awesome! Thank you!

  • @samsulummasamsulumma6898
    @samsulummasamsulumma6898 3 роки тому +6

    This is an excellent video! Thanks for the time and effort! I have thoroughly enjoyed every single of your videos so far!

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom3088 2 роки тому

    This channel is awesome! Out of sight!

  • @andrewpolzin8489
    @andrewpolzin8489 2 роки тому

    Damn fine video. Thanks! Love your self created stock footage and humour.

  • @PronatorTendon
    @PronatorTendon 2 роки тому +2

    Your videos are incredibly informative. There's an order of magnitude more information than other channels I watch for vintage tech. Your relation of the history of these products, companies, and people is impressive. I look forward to more in the future

  • @sunnohh
    @sunnohh 2 роки тому +1

    I thought this was going to be about DEC, pleasantly surprised, what a wonderful history to learn about. The other digital!

  • @mikolasstrajt3874
    @mikolasstrajt3874 2 роки тому

    I like your acting style. It brings more life to the video.

  • @AshtonScorpius
    @AshtonScorpius 2 роки тому

    Thanks for this video. I'm a lifelong Coloradoan and CS student, so I'm especially glad to hear this story of a Denver-based tech company flourishing.

  • @XalphYT
    @XalphYT 3 роки тому +1

    Fascinating!

  • @IainShepherd1
    @IainShepherd1 2 роки тому

    I got into tech in the late 80s with PC clones, I've read a little earlier history but The Digital Group had never come up till now! Thanks for ensuring these names don't die.

  • @SSJRayman
    @SSJRayman 3 роки тому +3

    Excellent. Much appreciated!

  • @boowiebear
    @boowiebear 2 роки тому

    What an absolute frenzy of innovation and failure during this time! I had no idea those early computers were so difficult to use but so many people saw the potential.

  • @olsmokey
    @olsmokey 2 роки тому

    This brought back so many memories. I designed periferals for S-100 computers back in the early 80s, even started a user group for one particular make/model S-100 based kit computer back then. What times we had, staying at the meeting til the early morning the day after the meetings - it was all new and very exciting. Even wrote software for CPM which was much fun and used an assembler for the venerable Z-80 for other projects. Ahhh, them were the days!
    Subscribed. Thanks for the memories.
    Edit: I had a 4004 CPU stashed around here somewhere. Can't find it...

  • @joshuaharlow4241
    @joshuaharlow4241 2 роки тому

    Well done. Thank you. Beyond interesting. Very appreciated!

  • @carlosedwardos
    @carlosedwardos 2 роки тому +1

    Wow, very impressive video on a very obscure company from the 70's, can't believe you found so much info! - I am an original Altair 8800 owner (still own it) and so I got a big kick out of this video! - One request, we could hear your intriguing monologue much more clearly without "The Entertainer" or other background music while you are presenting such great information. Great job, subscribed and shared!!

  • @paulawillaminachandler-ren3725
    @paulawillaminachandler-ren3725 2 роки тому +1

    Very informative, and enjoyable video. Thanks for your effort in research, narration, and editing.

  • @andrewhudson3723
    @andrewhudson3723 2 роки тому

    Excellent overview! Great research!

  • @NickBurgoyne
    @NickBurgoyne 2 роки тому

    Excellent documentary. Great production values. I'm very impressed :)

  • @iteachtime
    @iteachtime 2 роки тому

    Man, I really enjoyed this - Thanks!

  • @Spudcore
    @Spudcore 2 роки тому

    Amazed I'm only coming across your channel now. Subbed, with gusto!

  • @audiodiwhy2195
    @audiodiwhy2195 2 роки тому

    Excellent video. This must have been a ton of work to put together. Thanks

  • @ldchappell1
    @ldchappell1 2 роки тому

    Very interesting and well made.

  • @brianbowcutt249
    @brianbowcutt249 2 роки тому

    This channel is an absolute under appreciated gem, been binging under quarantine and loved every upload. Hope commenting counts for something with the inscrutable algorithm.

  • @d_shepperd
    @d_shepperd 2 роки тому

    Very nicely done.

  • @VexMage
    @VexMage 2 роки тому

    Oh wow! I didn't think I'd hear about the high school at the end of my road in a tech video, lol.

  • @nilesisniles
    @nilesisniles 2 роки тому

    Great piece.

  • @catriona_drummond
    @catriona_drummond 2 роки тому

    This was beautiful.

  • @jimbarlow2611
    @jimbarlow2611 2 роки тому

    Just Wow! You are a unique and talented storyteller. Your videos are a treasure. Thanks for this one, it filled in some big gaps for me.

  • @AveragePootis
    @AveragePootis 2 роки тому

    That board setup in the thumbnail looks so incredibly similar to my 1984 Compucorp Metric 85 that it's uncanny

  • @kaliban4758
    @kaliban4758 2 роки тому +1

    Sometimes i wish that the computer of today were like the computer of the 1970's in that the "motherboard" was nothing more than a backplane where EVERYTHING plugged into

  • @johnpenner5182
    @johnpenner5182 2 роки тому

    thx for the info on the mark8 - missing info in my databanks of early computer history.

  • @smd-tech
    @smd-tech 2 роки тому

    Thank you thank you thank you for calling it a microprocessor and not a microprawhsessor.

  • @Mr_Meowingtons
    @Mr_Meowingtons 3 роки тому +1

    wow that Computer looked Sweet! it had every thing going for it and was leading the way in a lot of things that would be standards. but like a lot of places they Fed it up with miss management

  • @samuellourenco1050
    @samuellourenco1050 2 роки тому

    Used lots of 74SNs in my beginner days, 20 years ago.

  • @davewright3088
    @davewright3088 2 роки тому

    I remember a marathon, assembling a DG Z80 kit over one Thanksgiving holiday at home. A day or so in, Dad entered the room and asked if I was going to come out and spend some time with the rest of the family... Alas, that system was donated to the Exploratorium during one of my lab purges over the years. I recall designing and building a 16K dynamic ram board that never achieved an acceptable BER, and some struggles trying to get an 8" floppy drive to work as well. Later on, I was able to acquire a Cromemco Z2D, and get on with the business of actually writing code...

  • @rauljvila
    @rauljvila 3 роки тому

    This channel is awesome! Thanks for the great content.
    Waiting for the YT algorithm to notice it.

  • @pcs9518
    @pcs9518 2 роки тому

    Pretty much the prehistoric version of the modern PC. Loved it keep up the awesome work!

  • @martygeist2116
    @martygeist2116 2 роки тому

    Hi;
    I think it is interesting that the Boards that You show in the system that You bring up to show the Digital Group Sign-on are the Boards that I sold to Bryan Blackburn along with the Screen Shot of the various programs, one of which Is ICOSE, which I have the complete Listing for, I don't remember if I sent Bryan that Listing.. But, it was written by a friend of mine.. And so I recognize it.. Thank You Marty

  • @MrNednos
    @MrNednos 2 роки тому

    Great content, thank you!

  • @channelwoodgrange
    @channelwoodgrange 2 роки тому

    "Nerd Praetorian Guard" You know... with an impressive logo... I'm smelling TTT t-shirt or pin merch on the horizon.

  • @paulstubbs7678
    @paulstubbs7678 2 роки тому

    17:04 Mini byte master, now that's a nice looking machine.

  • @CromemcoZ2
    @CromemcoZ2 Рік тому

    I loved Digital Group's magazine ads. Their Phi-Decks looked amazing! Sphere made sexy ads too, but IIRC they were way out of my price range.By 1977 when I was ready to buy a serious kit PC of my own, going with a proprietary bus felt like a mistake. S-100 had lots of support from independent vendors by then. I settled on a Cromemco Z2 chassis and 4Mhz Z80 CPU card, partly because that's what my mentor had. Processor Technology's 3P+S card for I/O and their VDM-1 video card, a North Star floppy controller, and a too-new 32k RAM card from TDL rounded out the machine. That TDL card never worked fully loaded, but eventually made a terrific 28k card if you pulled one row of chips and made a few wiring changes. :) Anyway, four different brands plugged into the same bus. That was the S-100 dream in-action.
    Thanks for the video. I subscribed earlier today and am enjoying what's turning into a binge session as I keep seeing new ones I want to watch RIGHT NOW. :)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Рік тому

      Many thanks for the vote of confidence! Yeah dg stuff.. any computer stuff really.. was crazy expensive. You had to be pretty dedicated to be an early adopter like that. Few thousand bucks would buy you a pretty decent car back then I think! That must have been fun mixing and matching S100 parts to get exactly what you wanted!

  • @TheBigChill1
    @TheBigChill1 2 роки тому

    On the mid 90's I installed a complete network with SEC/Digital equipment on one of the greatest companies in my country...I wonder if it still works today...

  • @dubselectorr345
    @dubselectorr345 2 роки тому

    My great cousin Robert Edwards invented the Altair 8800! The name was not mentioned but the computer was covered well. He invented the Altair BUS. He was not much of a family man and no one saw him all too much. His passion was to be a doctor so he sold it (for nothing) to Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, who at the time both worked for him, TOGETHER, in a garage... The world was more focused on software rather than Hardware at this time period. That is what Edward's focus was on, the hardware... I am a technician of 20 years and it oddly has nothing to do with him because I did not see him all too much. R.I.P. Edward.
    Great video!

  • @Arivia1
    @Arivia1 2 роки тому

    Finally got around to watching this - as always it's a treasure, fun and educational. I am typing this on a "stultifyingly conformist" black box x64 desktop though!

  • @DrGooseDuckman
    @DrGooseDuckman 2 роки тому

    Well done! Liked and subbed.

  • @frankowalker4662
    @frankowalker4662 2 роки тому

    What an interesting but sad story.

  • @memadmax69
    @memadmax69 2 роки тому +1

    I had a rainbow 100 once back in the early 90s and it ran cp/m.
    Interesting machine, couldn't do crap with it.
    Think I traded it for a hard drive lol

  • @haweater1555
    @haweater1555 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the history lesson. At the time, I was 9 years old and reading Popular Science magazine, and don't recall ever reading about this company. Just another one of those homebrew companies that advertised in BYTE magazine to fall down to the onslaught of Apple/Commodre/Tandy mass-produced ready-to-use systems. MITS took off as an early starter due to being featured on the cover of Popular Electronics -- and that publicity is credited at kickstarting the entire microcomputer revolution. The other startups were only playing catchup until the Big Guys made a much more polished product a few years later.
    Example: Apple was a typical startup. Until Jobs made the decision to commision a custom machine mold to make an attractive case for the second model. Expensive investment, but it made all the difference in the world for your product to be taken seriously by the press. All the other little guys look crude. This is how you turn a $10,000 company into a $1,000,000,000,000 company.

  • @ziggyinc
    @ziggyinc 2 роки тому

    I love that you point out the amature radio connection, which I have seen glossed over by others. Thanks! de KL4ET.

  • @cebudave
    @cebudave 2 роки тому

    At first I though I would be watching the story of Digital Equipment Corporation, but this was far more interesting. I wonder if there was confusion between the two companies with digital in their name.

  • @jj74qformerlyjailbreak3
    @jj74qformerlyjailbreak3 2 роки тому

    This J11 is my favorite 60pin 16 bit processor

  • @haweater1555
    @haweater1555 2 роки тому

    22:30. Apple's IPO at $22 per share. Apple stock has since split by a factor of 224 since founding, and with a current share price trading at $174, means that those original shares are now worth $38,976 !

  • @kennywah5024
    @kennywah5024 2 роки тому

    10:50 this music track was used in the GT maintenance Shop in Gran Turismo 5 and it's killing me

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому

      That's The Entertainer. Its ancient. UA-cam's audio library has it probably because it's copyright free. :)

  • @Brightstarlivesteam
    @Brightstarlivesteam 2 роки тому

    I have a Cromemco system which I never got to work. It is currently sitting in the floor next to my desk.

  • @rustkitty
    @rustkitty 2 роки тому

    4:04 wow, he did "It's not a bug, it's a feature" before it was cool!!

  • @Meow_Zedong
    @Meow_Zedong 2 роки тому

    At 16:52, you use a black and white picture of a color graphics board which gave me a chortle

  • @thelegion_within
    @thelegion_within 3 роки тому

    that was pretty interesting!

  • @10gamer64
    @10gamer64 2 роки тому

    How the heck you only have 1200 views, this is should have at least 1 mil views

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому

      Many thanks. UA-cam is just like that I guess.. I'm small with a short track record. Plus I guess the algorithm has trouble figuring out how to classify something like this. Or I just suck at SEO. :)

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd 2 роки тому

    I'm surprised DEC (Digital Equipment Corp) didn't take issue with The Digital Group's name. Maybe it was because they didn't operate in quite the same industries? Neat piece of history though. And 3 MB must have been a heck of a storage array for the 70s! 👍️

  • @HoldandModify
    @HoldandModify 2 роки тому

    I love your videos. Recently discovered. I know this is an older one and maybe you’ve addressed this but, your audio needs a low pass filter. Certain words are pegging the low band 30-60hz area causing a heavy thud or pop in headphones or in my subwoofer when watching on home theater. :)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому +2

      My first mic was a Blue Snowball that I suspect was defective. It was always erratic despite replicating the recording conditions. I tried to correct it in Audition but I may have overcorrected. New mic I hope will put things on a better footing.

    • @HoldandModify
      @HoldandModify 2 роки тому +1

      @@TechTimeTraveller what I do for my newer videos is add an EQ and just pull down all the frequencies below 60hz. Love your work and look forward to watching your stuff!

  • @tenminutetokyo2643
    @tenminutetokyo2643 Рік тому

    The 7404N, yeah!!!

  • @MrRedFoxorMrelzorrorojo
    @MrRedFoxorMrelzorrorojo 2 роки тому

    Looking at these computers, I can tell it's the 70's.

  • @AiOinc1
    @AiOinc1 2 роки тому

    Such a shame they went the way they did. As always with early computing, a bit better management would have probably saved them in the long run. Absolutely beautiful machines.
    Maybe if they'd stuck around longer we might have seen an x86 board pop up.

  • @MISSCHAMPAGNE
    @MISSCHAMPAGNE 2 роки тому

    you are my new favorite channel and i am in love with u

  • @mdesm2005
    @mdesm2005 2 роки тому

    interesting video. In fact, very good. But the piano in the background makes it hard to listen too. Is there a version w/o a sound track?

  • @martinenglish6641
    @martinenglish6641 2 роки тому

    There are still Digital mainframes in service in data centers.

  • @michaelclement1337
    @michaelclement1337 2 роки тому

    Are there any surviving working examples of the The Digital Group 6501 CPU board?

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому +1

      Yes.. bytecollector had one. He sold it to someone a couple of years ago. AFAIK it was working.

  • @ihateevilbill
    @ihateevilbill 2 роки тому

    Hold on a wee second. So, im at 17:11 and youre showing a computer that looks like one I came across way back in 1992 during my first year at college. I dont think it can be the same exact model as you say there were very few ever made but it was built exactly the same (small monitor on the left with the PC internals hidden at the right, connected to the stand mechanism with a breakout keyboard. Anyway, the reason I bring it up is because I learned cobol on that machine. The one we had was weird though as it wasnt black and white, it was black and orange (its one of the main reasons I still remember it, the other being that there was only one of them in the entire college) and I believe it had a "resolution" of 80x24 characters. Its just so strange to see the same form factor after so many years. Brings back some weird memories of absolutely hating cobol because pascal was easier XD

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 роки тому +1

      Hmm I wonder what that was. I doubt it was a Bytemaster as I think only a dozen of those or do were ever made. Maybe an Osborne?

    • @ihateevilbill
      @ihateevilbill 2 роки тому

      @@TechTimeTraveller I am gonna have to find out, my first port of call will be google images and "Osborne". If I figure it out i will be back :)

  • @williamhaynes7089
    @williamhaynes7089 2 роки тому

    Surprised that they could call their company 'The Digital group' when 'Digital computer corp' existed... What is crazy is the company I work for, we trash canned our last Dec-server in 2018...

  • @kelvinnkat
    @kelvinnkat 2 роки тому

    I'm very much late to comment, but what happened to the sound around 7:11 or so?

  • @Drmcclung
    @Drmcclung Рік тому

    Dick Bemus is the best name ever!