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On 9/14/2016 2:45 PM, Califbill wrote:
wrote: On Mon, 12 Sep 2016 11:02:07 -0500, Califbill wrote: I went to school for 36 weeks to learn to fix mainframe computer systems for NCR. Yikes, the longest mainframe school I ever went to was 8 weeks. They sent you back to the field for a while, then you went back for a more advanced course. Once you got a feel for the culture of the various families, (Endicott, Kingston or Rochester) you usually did not need much additional education to figure that stuff out anyway. If you were trained on a 168, it wasn't hard to figure out what a 3033 or a 3090 was doing. The Rochester machines were even more so. If you understood any AS/400, you understood them all. The hardware may have been different but the maintenance package was the same and they all ran the same software. When I moved to Florida I waived training on about 400 boxes because the technology of virtually all of the "industry systems" (ATMs, Cash registers, teller terminals etc) was robbed from the UC.5 support processor we had been using on Endicott mainframes for over a decade. The rest was just belts, pulleys and wheels. Same with the 3890 check sorter. It took me a few weeks to get a feel for the ink ****er and some of the adjustments on the feed but it is just a paper pusher, run by a 360/25 processor and I was a region specialist on the 25. The 36 weeks was basic electronics for some weeks, and then the mainframe, and all the peripherals. They we still discrete transistors back then, and we learned to fix individual boards. When I got into the game Burroughs was using parallel plate packages and memory cores hand wired in Brazil. No monitors, just TTY with paper tape or cards for input. Man, I'm old. |
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