Neha Patil (Editor)

PDP 12

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Release date
  
1969

Units sold
  
725

Discontinued
  
1972

Operating system
  
OS/8 , DIALPS, LAP6W

PDP-12

Manufacturer
  
Digital Equipment Corporation

Memory
  
4k 12-bit words; can be expanded to 32K

The PDP-12 (Programmed Data Processor) was created by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in 1969 and was marketed specifically for science and engineering. It was the 3rd in the LINC family and its main uses were for applications in chemistry, applied psychology, patient monitoring and industrial testing. It is the combination of the LINC computer and the PDP-8 and can run programs for either computer. It features a single central processor with two distinct operating modes, each with its own instruction set that allows it to run both computers' programs.

Because it is the combination of two different computers it is very versatile. It can be a laboratory oriented machine with several facilities for I/O, auxiliary storage, and control and sensing for external equipment or a general purpose computer with a flexible I/O capability that can support multiple peripheral devices. The basic package came with dual LINCtape drives, a scope display and I/O ports for interfacing with external laboratory equipment and peripherals. In addition to a display-based OS other software packages were included for data acquisition and display, Fourier analysis and mass spectrometry.

Production and training

Less than a year after its introduction the PDP-12 already had over 400 orders placed and in total 725 units were manufactured before being discontinued in 1972.

Since it was used as laboratory equipment DEC offered a two-week "hands-on" programming course with the purchase of the computer. You could take the class at the main plant in Maynard, Massachusetts or in Palo Alto, California in the USA or you could take the class in Reading in the United Kingdom, Cologne in Germany or Paris, France.

References

PDP-12 Wikipedia