Ask HN: Stories from Users of Minicomputers and Mainframes
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I really enjoying using a PDP-11 with RSTS/E, here each user got two 64k address spaces, one for data, one for code, so you got a BASIC experience that was a bit better than the Apple ][ or TRS-80, particularly you could save you work on a hard drive.
In the computer explorers I got to use an IBM 3090 in the later 1980s which was close to the pinnacle of bipolar mainframes running the 370 XA architecture. At this point in time the IBM Mainframes had
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VM_(operating_system)
IBM really struggled to develop timesharing for the 360 and wound up applying virtual machine technology to give every software developer their own copy of a DOS-like operating system. In the early 1970 it was really a struggle to get time on a 360, by the late 1980s VM was everywhere and you could just log in with your 3270 terminal when you wanted to.
Circa 1980 it was easy for a microcomputer user to "look up" to the PDP-11 and think the future might look like that but actually the PDP-11 became obsolete rather quickly because the user had access to only 64k which was the same problem micros were about to have as memory got cheap and you could afford more than 64k of RAM. Digital came out with the VAX which was basically a modern computer, my high school got one by the late 1980s and it was a really capable on machine where you had good compilers for languages like PASCAL which was great for CS education.