nanog mailing list archives

Re: what about 48 bits?


From: Steven Bellovin <smb () cs columbia edu>
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 2010 17:02:39 -0400


On Apr 5, 2010, at 4:58 59PM, Barry Shein wrote:


On April 5, 2010 at 13:51 smb () cs columbia edu (Steven Bellovin) wrote:

Yup.  10 years earlier, a 3Com Ethernet card for a Vax cost about $1500, if memory serves.

Early-mid 80s? I'd say at least twice that, I don't think there were
too many cards for Vaxes and similar for less than $5K.

It could have been $3K, but I don't think it was higher.

An NIU20 for DECSYSTEM-20 was a 3U box, it was just a single ethernet
interface, and cost around $15-20K.

About the same price for an IBM370 (specifically, 3090) ethernet box
which included a PC/AT and sat on a box about the size of a dorm cube
refrigerator which, if you opened it up, contained a chunk of Unibus
backplane in which was a (I think 3COM?) ethernet board (and power
supply etc.), some common Vax ethernet card. Weird, the whole thing
was basically a kludged together Unibus to bus/tag channel adapter or
maybe even 3274 using something like an IRMA board? I knew it well
because it crashed a lot and operations decided I was the only one who
had the magic voodoo to bring it back to life which as I remember was
to POWER-CYCLE IT! Well, sometimes you had to power-cycle it more than
once to get it all to synch.

I remember the design, but never used it.

And we had to put coins in those boxes to get our packets through! If
you wanted an email it cost a dime, FTP was 75cents for the first
100KB and 10c for each KB thereafter...ok, that may not be entirely
accurate.


Of course not -- you forgot about the credit card reader option.


                --Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb







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