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          %%                                                        %%
          %%    What's Hacking?                                     %%
          %%                          A series by David Lightman    %%
          %%                                                        %%
          %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%-SPECIAL ISSUE-%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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          %%                  VAX COMPUTER SYSTEMS                  %%
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          This  is  a requested discussion from Jolly Bardsman's  Pub  &
       Tavern at (214) 690-4634.  If you have any requests, send me mail
       at any address listed below:

       USENET:  [email protected]
                ... or ...
                {texsun..texbell..}!attctc!bdunn

       TELEMAIL: csupport/a755.cc3556/tech.services/credit.data/isg/trw

       BBS's:
                Elm Street           Jolly Bardsman's Pub & Tavern
                Channel Z            Spyder's Web
                Dead Zone            Abyssal Plane

                Oblivion (if AO gets the damn thing off the ground)

          By  03/06/90, you may connect to a beta Twilight Zone at  214-
       606-1413.   You may also reach me voice at  214-660-6054.   Limit
       the calls to an EXTREME minimum!

          If I get multiple requests about a topic (as I did with  VAX),
       I will put something online the WHAT'S HACKING? subboards and the
       beta system Twilight Zone ]I[.


       -----------------------------------------------------------------

       VAX:  The VAX acronym is derived from Virtual Address  eXtension.
             The VAX computer is designed to use memory addresses beyond
             the  hardware's actual limits, enabling it to  handle  pro-
             grams that are too large to fit into physical memory.   The
             VAX  computer system is a member of the  Digital  Equipment
             Corporation  (DEC)  computer  family.   Currently  the  VAX
             series includes models spanning the desktop VAX station  to
             mainframe class multi-CPU VAX processors.  These vary  from
             the superminis, like MicroVAX, to the older, moderate sized
             11/7XX  series, to the newer 6000 series.   These  computer
             systems commonly use an operating system known as VMS.

       VMS:  The VMS acronym is for Virtual Memory System.  The operands
             of  VMS are very similar to other operating systems.   Back
             in  the days of stand-alone computer systems, DEC  had  the
             idea for streamlining the operation of their computers  for
             business  and  engineering.  It conceived VMS as a  way  of
             allowing the basic computer management to be done by a user
             familiar with any of the multiple systems it made.

       DCL:  The DCL acronym is for Digital Command Language.  It is the
             fundamental language of the VMS.  Those of you who have  an
             IBM  system,  you can think of a DCL program like  a  batch
             file.  You can do a lot with it (much more than a PC-DOS or
             MS-DOS  batch)  but it work basically the  same  way.   One
             difference is that when you want to execute anything as  if
             you were typing it in at the command prompt, you first must
             put a "$" in front of the command in the DCL program.   DCL
             programs  are commonly called COM files as well.  When  you
             are not executing a COM or DCL program file, you are almost
             always typing things into the DCL processor.

Downloaded From P-80 Systems 304-744-2253