First OpenVMS Boot On IA64
vaxzilla writes "At 3:31pm EST on Friday, January 31st, 2003,
OpenVMS for the Intel IA64
architecture
successfully booted and ran a DIR command.
The Intel Itanium family of processors is the third architecture supported
by OpenVMS in its
25 year
history. Originally it ran on Digital Equipment Corporation VAX
systems; in the early 1990s, support was added for the DEC Alpha
processors. Following the acquisition of DEC by Compaq, and more recently
Compaq by HP, the Itanium and Itanium2 port of OpenVMS is now being
undertaken by HP. Congratulations on a job well done to the folks at
ZK03 in Nashua, NH!"
I talk form personal exp on vax/vms druing my stint at Purdue University during 1990s..
Considering that VAX/VMS sucks when compared to unix..why?
Remember the architecture person for both VAX/VMS and winNT is the same damn idiot....
Don't Tread on OpenSource
Too late they realized that they had forgotten to implement a shutdown command or even a copy command and the filesystem was corrupted when they turned the power off.
--
But then again I thought VCR+ was a stupid idea and would die a quick death--so what do I know?
This question was asked elsewhere on this post... VMS is optimised, at the very least, for fourier wave analysis... Having a 64 bit processor could make MRI scans faster and potentially have higher resolutions, as the data packets wouldn't need to be 'thunked'.
We want VMS on new hardware, so that radiologists can more quickly and more accurately diagnose things like cancers and musculo-skeletal trauma.
New MRI scanners run on VMS these days... (although there is a push to migrate to Windows, because all the PACS are Windows... a processess in which this Itanium port is probably going to be a stepping stone...)