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Commodore PC Still Controls Heat and A/C At 19 Michigan Public Schools

jmulvey writes: Think your SCADA systems are outdated? Environmental monitoring at 19 Grand Rapids Public Schools are still controlled by a Commodore Amiga. Programmed by a High School student in the 1980s, the system has been running 24/7 for decades. A replacement has been budgeted by the school system, estimated cost: Between $1.5 and 2 million. How much is your old Commodore Amiga worth?

456 comments

  1. Cool story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or is it hot?

    1. Re:Cool story by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

      ....and cue David Caruso putting on sunglasses.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    2. Re:Cool story by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Sorry, he is ---> that* way ...

      * CSI: Miami - Horatio Caine's Sunglasses Moments / One Liners

    3. Re:Cool story by darkain · · Score: 1

      Too much talking. Not enough YYYYEEEEAAAAAAAHHHHHHH!!!!! http://cow.org/csi/

    4. Re:Cool story by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      LOL +1 Would YEAH! again

    5. Re:Cool story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is Michigan, so right now it is likely temperate, moving towards hot & humid, but will be going back towards frozen in 12 to 15 weeks, and deep freeze by the new year. So, yeah - those things.

  2. Thermostat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just use a thermostat?

    1. Re:Thermostat? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      big buildings have zones, ventilation intakes and exhausts and mixing chambers, filters, humidification, perhaps chilled water plant, etc.

      you're going to need a lot of thermostats and alot of other sensors and controls.

    2. Re:Thermostat? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      you're going to need a lot of thermostats and alot of other sensors and controls.

      You're also going to need some way to keep the kids from screwing with them.

    3. Re:Thermostat? by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 3, Funny

      You're also going to need some way to keep the kids from screwing with them.

      When I was in school the sure fire way to get us to mess with something like a thermostat was to put a lock of some kind on it. It was usually the threat of meeting with the "The Board of Education" that kept us in line. "The Board of Education" was very similar to a cricket bat with holes drilled in it that our principal kept on the wall behind his desk, which was labeled, "The Board of Education" in bright red outlined in black.

      I'm guessing that between Ritalin and the constant distraction of cell phones, things like thermostats really wouldn't be noticed by students today.

    4. Re:Thermostat? by DrVxD · · Score: 1

      You're also going to need some way to keep the kids from screwing

      FTFY...

      --
      Not everything that can be measured matters; Not everything that matters can be measured.
    5. Re:Thermostat? by matfud · · Score: 1

      Old enough to know the cane? (bat, paddle) I missed by one year. So I am a run away youff.

    6. Re:Thermostat? by weilawei · · Score: 1

      "The Board of Education" was very similar to a cricket bat with holes drilled in it that our principal kept on the wall behind his desk

      My parents had one of those when I was a kid, but I don't think you're allowed to use them anymore.

    7. Re:Thermostat? by weilawei · · Score: 1

      There is no solution to that. The best you can really hope for is encouraging them screw safely. Provide condoms, birth control, and STD testing, problem mitigated.

      Around here, Planned Parenthood does that.

    8. Re:Thermostat? by Cito · · Score: 1

      motion detector attached to flame thrower pointing down from ceiling tile and electrified locked box over the thermostat :P

    9. Re:Thermostat? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      the fire alarms at schools already spray dye on those who trip them. probably a more realistic system, make easy to find perp, to make example to deter others

  3. I wish I still had mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I wish I still had mine. That, the C64 and the Vic20 are what got me started back in the good old days, tape drives, typing in games line by line from magazines then hunting down and fixing the errors because the magazine was misprinted. Loved it.

    1. Re:I wish I still had mine by antiperimetaparalogo · · Score: 1

      I wish I still had mine. That, the C64 and the Vic20 are what got me started back in the good old days, tape drives, typing in games line by line from magazines then hunting down and fixing the errors because the magazine was misprinted. Loved it.

      Amstrad CPC 6128 for me (i was making fun of C64 and Singlair Sinclair 81/Spectrum...) but yes: "typing in games line by line from magazines then hunting down and fixing the errors because the magazine was misprinted" are what got me started back in the good old days also - loved it!

      --
      Antisthenes: "Wisdom begins by examining the words/names." - excuse my English, i am (slightly...) better with my Greek!
    2. Re:I wish I still had mine by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      All the old programming books are still available on the Internet (see link below). I'm translating the old BASIC games into Python to learn the Python language better. I never got most of the games to work on the C64 because I didn't understand programming or BASIC dialects back then.

      http://www.atariarchives.org/

    3. Re:I wish I still had mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and look at you now! Nobody serves a burger better than you do, and you never forget my fries. Here's lookin' at you, kid.

    4. Re:I wish I still had mine by davester666 · · Score: 1

      OMG Yes. What was especially fun was entering one of those multi-page hex dumps of a game, which included a checksum to make sure you entered each line correctly...but you could occasionally enter the line incorrectly but the checksum wouldn't catch it. So you had to go through the entire program and visually match every single byte with the magazine's listing.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    5. Re:I wish I still had mine by antiperimetaparalogo · · Score: 1

      Add some BASIC (a great... "basic" language!) to this, and you have the birth of a programmer - too bad such an enviroment (i.e., just turn on the computer and be ready to code) does not exist (it does actually, but nowdays kids just want to buy their games and have fun immediately... you and me had to do some work to earn our fun!)

      --
      Antisthenes: "Wisdom begins by examining the words/names." - excuse my English, i am (slightly...) better with my Greek!
    6. Re:I wish I still had mine by hi-endian · · Score: 1

      Riiiight, because Pong was played by millions of people who had to "do some work" to earn their fun.

    7. Re:I wish I still had mine by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      That's why people of this generation are so much better at IT than younger people...
      Those who started out on C64s and similar systems got to learn the system inside out, and were encouraged to do so.

      Modern computers do the exact opposite, they actively discourage kids from learning about them and instil fear to prevent them from trying anything. Systems which are too fragile and easy to break at a software level, filled with scary warnings. Kids learn by trying things and breaking stuff, and all these scary warnings will put them off. We now have a generation of people who are afraid to do anything outside of the limited sandbox, and it shows.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    8. Re:I wish I still had mine by antiperimetaparalogo · · Score: 1
      I'm old boy, that's what old people do: they tell young people "you had it easy..." - you will do the same when you grow old...

      And get off my lawn!

      --
      Antisthenes: "Wisdom begins by examining the words/names." - excuse my English, i am (slightly...) better with my Greek!
    9. Re:I wish I still had mine by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      That's why people of this generation are so much better at IT than younger people... Those who started out on C64s and similar systems got to learn the system inside out, and were encouraged to do so.

      There is hope though. Windows Metros/Modern looks a lot like C64 Graphics.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    10. Re:I wish I still had mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good to see you can still afford burgers on your dole payments, and regular enough that they know your chip preference. Gee and they thought you wouldn't get that far...

  4. Anything is possible ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    without systemd.

    1. Re:Anything is possible ... by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

      Seem to recall there was (micro)Emacs included though.

      Obviously, these days, we all do it the other way around and make use of the Amiga-heating-and-ac-emulator extension to Emacs.

  5. What is being missed... is the $2 million part... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So less than 2 dozen schools need to spend upwards of $2 million dollars to... control the HVAC?

    Really?

    That is the bigger issue, IMHO...

  6. worthless school administration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $2 million replace simple software to control thermostats - which has been in place for 25 years nonstop and built for a pittance by a kid.

    That's almost as bad as bulldozing Sandy Hook because of the memories.

  7. Student by bugs2squash · · Score: 2

    So have they run out of high school students ? Why not just give one of them a raspberry pi and have them program up a replacement. Hell, get 2 raspberry pis and keep one as spare.

    --
    Nullius in verba
    1. Re:Student by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An RP is a million times more complicated than a Commodore 64, and also harder to program. It _might_ work, but it probably wouldn't work very well and would crap out and die due to flash going bad or a number of other possible problems within 2 years.

    2. Re:Student by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RPi can be programmed using Python. Also, what flash are you talking about? You store the OS in a SD card.

    3. Re:Student by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Have you met any modern highschool students? Most couldn't program their way out of "Hello World". And those who would attempt it want to use Java.

    4. Re:Student by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadly, most people like their iPads and "apps" for entertainment and have no caring about how they work or what cool things they can actually do with them. I wish I could say this is a new trend; it isn't. It just is that computers keep getting more widespread that it seems like a new trend. Unfortunately the computer industry and education isn't helping though.

      My school district gave iPads to all the students. I would have much rather seen them go with raspberry PIs, Arduinos, or something else. We really need to fight the culture of treating computers as a black box and foster a creative and inquisitive approach. There are people who buck the trend, but we could do much better.

  8. If it works... by unixisc · · Score: 1

    ...why are they replacing it? It's not like it's being used for computing purposes, where leaving it within the network makes it a backdoor for malware. It's simply being used to control the HVAC, which could be done w/ an Arduino or a Raspberry Pi. Or even an ancient PC armed w/ just FreeDOS. But if it's working, what's the compelling need to replace it, much less budget up to $2M for it?

    1. Re:If it works... by Forgefather · · Score: 1

      The only conceivable reason that I can think of would be that they are including a lot of other stuff, like rewiring the system, and replacing the central heating/cooling units.

      --
      "There are lies, there are damn lies, and there are statistics"
    2. Re:If it works... by mangamuscle · · Score: 1

      .... because otherwise they could not pocket 1.999 million dollars.

    3. Re:If it works... by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      Apparently it's a problem with how the control system communicates with the individual systems in the 19 buildings. It uses radio modems, which actually significantly predate the Amiga. The machinery in the individual buildings for whatever reasons can't be retrofitted to use some other form of communication. And the Amiga is the only thing around that can properly interface with the nessecary radio modems to issue commands.

      The systems in the buildings are very old and complex. I am guessing that most of the cost of the new system is retrofitting all that stuff so that it can simply communicate with a more modern system. So it isn't actually the central control system that will be tremendously expensive.

    4. Re:If it works... by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      I forgot to say that the radio modems are picking up interference from the walkie talkies used by the school system. Which means that they can't use their walkie talkies without messing up the environmental controls. Ordinarily I'd say they should just use some other communication devices. But it also means that the system is vulnerable to breakage from anyone else using the same frequencies or leaking into them.

    5. Re:If it works... by unimacs · · Score: 1

      It sounds like they're replacing a lot of things. And as cool as the Amiga based system is, having one guy in the whole world that knows how it works is not a situation I'd want to be in if I were responsible for those buildings.

    6. Re:If it works... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The town I grew up in, in .fi, had this thing which we used to call "AikatauluAmiga". Freely translated "Timetable Amiga". Basically an Amiga 500 showing the timetables, when the buses left from the "center". It was replaced at one point, but that was well into the 2000's. But it most certainly didn't work at all times. I found it somehow very amusing to try to check some schedule and be greeted by a Guru Meditation.

    7. Re:If it works... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It uses radio modems, which actually significantly predate the Amiga. The machinery in the individual buildings for whatever reasons can't be retrofitted to use some other form of communication.

      1980's era radio modems were maxxed out at 300bps so if they're really 1200bps they've been upgraded since then.

  9. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah. You could probably replace the thing with a raspberry pi .... at each location ... with a custom controller card.. and another one to control them all... for about $5,000

    $2M ? Someone's pork barrel overfloweth.

  10. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Firethorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Environmental control and monitoring becomes complicated when you're considering large buildings. At that size you need a system that controls how much your heat plant or cooling system is producing, as well as controlling fans and baffles to ensure that the cooking classroom, with a dozen ovens operating(or 30 computers) on the 3rd floor of the sunny side of the building stays comfortably cool while the the traditional English room on the shaded side of the first floor doesn't actually freeze.

    The reason it's $2M is the amount of programming and equipment replacement necessary, standard government waste, and the fact that they're no longer willing to let students/staff do it.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  11. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    This.
    Was exactly my first thought too.

  12. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It IS a PC, as in the generic sense of "personal computer". A Mac is a "PC" too. . .

  13. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    I am going to assume there is a idiot involved in delivering this news and that the budget is for replacing a lot more than just controls.

  14. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like a Pi and an emulator can do the same thing....

    For 2 million you could even put a whole Pi network up for this....

  15. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd expect it's a full overhaul of the HVAC system, rather than just replacing the controlling computers.

  16. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong.
    It's a couple thousand in hardware, and the software has already been written.
    It costs $2 million because somebody thinks that's what their software is worth. I think the fact that the system has been running for 25 years, written by some kid, proves that their software and imaginary property aren't worth $2mil.

  17. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you forgot to account for the costs of the highly paid consultants,

  18. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by NEDHead · · Score: 1

    Pi plus some student programmers - should be done for $1500. Which begs the question - if it still works, why replace it?

  19. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Nukenbar · · Score: 2

    I'm hoping that the $2 dollars is going to update a number of things, and not just the one system. Seems like you could rig up a VM to do the Commodore's work and a Raspberry Pi at each school to send the signals over the internet instead of OTA for probably about $5,000 in parts and $20k in labor.

  20. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 2

    Agreed. And the guy being interviewed seems to be on the same side of the argument we are. The media however are trying to spin this. I detect a hint of disdain in the tone of the anchorwoman as she goes over the list of repairs that were deemed a higher priority... Like replacing boilers, roofs, and removing asbestos... None of which are cheap. The bloody computer system works. It has its problems, but it works on 30 year old hardware. If it works on that there's no need to build out a 1.5 mil system to replace it. A modest modern desktop system to run the controller, upgrade the radios to get it off the communication frequency, and a good service contract with whoever you get that desktop from...you've got a system that'll last another 30 years for less than half the proposed budget.

  21. if it ain't broke by jinchoung · · Score: 1

    why in the hell WOULD they upgrade....

    1. Re:if it ain't broke by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because if it does break I'm not confident the vendor can get a replacement Commodore 64 out and installed in 24 hours.

      There's a concept called "end-of-life" and it does not mean when the equipment finally dies.

    2. Re:if it ain't broke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if it does break I'm not confident the vendor can get a replacement Commodore 64 out and installed in 24 hours.

      There's a concept called "end-of-life" and it does not mean when the equipment finally dies.

      Some of us could easily get a replacement Commy Amiga installed in 24 hours.

      Those who do not read enough to know what system would need to be replaced are doomed to rely on contractors who can not get it done either.

  22. More than computer? by in10se · · Score: 1

    For that much money, I'm assuming they are replacing more than the computer that controls the HVAC, they are probably replacing the HVAC system itself. Neither the article or the linked video make that clear.

    --
    Popisms.com - Connecting pop culture
  23. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 1985, the Amiga was a PC. The IBM PC, was only one Personal Computer among many others.

    Edit : Captcha = subset. I'm beginning to think /. is now controlled by an AI.

  24. ancient amiga replacement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, lessee,... 500 bucks for a whitebox PC, and (wild guess) lets say $1000 for a custom interface card to control the hardware, 500 bucks to hire some students to port the software to Linux, and you've got over a million left over to have a whacking big party!

    The only way I can see for it to cost 1.5-2.0 million bucks if if you hire a consulting firm to do it for you, and they will of course bill you for EVERYTHING except, perhaps, their trips to the toilet.

    1. Re:ancient amiga replacement by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

      of course they'll bill for the trips to the john. I'm a consultant, and I do that all the time. You think I have a billing code for "trips to john"?

  25. Hire That Programmer Immediately! by ewhac · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Please to remember: Amiga had pre-emptive multitasking, but no memory protection and no resource tracking. Diving through bad pointers would take out the entire system; and not meticulously free()ing every malloc() would lead to unrecoverable memory leaks which would... take out the entire system.

    So anyone who can write a program for that platform that is still running problem-free after 30 years deserves to be making stacks of cash in the embedded/IoT space.

    Also, shameless plug: http://amiga30.com/

    1. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "diving through bad pointers would take out the entire system; and not meticulously free()ing every malloc() would lead to unrecoverable memory leaks which would... take out the entire system."

      Ummm good programmers always free every malloc.
      That is not really the issue without an mmu you can actually fragment memory over time.
      Maybe the programer didn't use any dynamically allocated memory and just put everything on the stack? Frankly in most small embedded system you try and avoid alloc for that very reason.
      Other option is the system just does a reset every x days.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by ewhac · · Score: 1

      Ummm good programmers always free every malloc.

      Actually, I've heard the contrary argued on occasion: "Don't bother wasting code space on cleanup; the OS will do that when you exit."

      Maybe the programer didn't use any dynamically allocated memory and just put everything on the stack?

      Uh, no. Amiga's default stack size was 4 KiB (4096 bytes), and did not auto-extend. So nothing of any significant size was going on the stack.

    3. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Actually, I've heard the contrary argued on occasion: "Don't bother wasting code space on cleanup; the OS will do that when you exit."

      I've heard on occasion "Hold my beer. Watch this!" Doesn't mean it was said by someone smart.

    4. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, my shell-startup has a "Stack 65536" in it to make sure that bad ports of "portable programs" doesn't crash instantly. (Still some programs originally written for linux needs a stack in the megabyte range or more to work without crashing too often.
      Not that it is hard to swap in a new stack if your program needs it, it's just that so many programmers are clueless.

    5. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by dwywit · · Score: 1

      "Other option is the system just does a reset every x days."

      Makes sense - reset at 9am on a Saturday (few or no students or staff around) , and you'll know by midday if the reset failed, giving you the rest of the weekend to get started on a fix.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    6. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by Livius · · Score: 1

      So anyone who can write a program for that platform that is still running problem-free after 30 years deserves to be making stacks of cash in the embedded/IoT space.

      For contemporary bloatware, that might be true. If it's a simple program doing the same thing for 30 years, it could be full of bugs that just haven't surfaced yet.

    7. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by Toad-san · · Score: 1

      Or they just reboot the system every day or so. I'll bet those systems haven't been running nonstop 24-7.

    8. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good Scotsmen wear kilts too.

    9. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm good programmers always free every malloc.

      Oh you sweet summer child. There's a good reason every modern programming language includes automatic garbage collection.

    10. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "Actually, I've heard the contrary argued on occasion: "Don't bother wasting code space on cleanup; the OS will do that when you exit."
      On a modern OS with gigabytes of ram sure that can work. It is stupid and sloppy but it could work.
      On an embedded system?
      Not a chance.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    11. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had some utility that basically mapped large chunks of memory to lower addresses and small chunks of memory to higher addresses. Seemed to keep memory fragmentation to a minimum. I guess the idea would be that the larger chunks would be programs and things that were likely to stay resident and the smaller chunks would be the files you were working on in a single session? Can't recall exactly, but it did seem to help.

    12. Re:Hire That Programmer Immediately! by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Uh, no. Amiga's default stack size was 4 KiB (4096 bytes), and did not auto-extend. So nothing of any significant size was going on the stack.

      Is anything of significant size needed to control an HVAC system?

  26. whats missing? by WillRobinson · · Score: 1

    Wjats missing is giving the computersience department at all the schools 50k budget and the origional source code to implement on current hardware. This wpuld be the best use of the funds and save the rest. In fact let each school do a competition and give them a reason to really excel.

  27. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by phantomfive · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It's amazing how successfully IBM/MIcrosoft won the war over the word "PC": now only Windows computers can be called personal computers.

    It's equally amazing how meaningless that victory actually is.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  28. Why??? by EmeraldBot · · Score: 1

    Why the negative backlash here? I think it's AWESOME that stuff from the 80's is still running to this day, and I think that's a mark of quality construction if the Amiga still runs to this day. Why are they supposed to replace it if it does the job? It's not like there's any networking here or areas that are exposed to the public, just a computer controlling the temperature. If anything, I can understand replacing it because the maintenance is getting difficult (Amiga parts are quite hard to find nowadays), and maybe when something on the Amiga actually does break that puts it out of commission for good (the processor, for instance). Replacing it because ZOMG IT'S FROM THE EIGHTIES KILL IT WITH FIRE seems like a very irrational and kneejerk reaction to me. If nothing else, let me have it! I'd love to see how this person did it, seems like a very interesting project. I once did something similar with a system that controlled automatic doors - I don't know if it's still running or not though.

    --
    "Set a man a fire, he'll be warm for the rest of the night. Set a man afire, he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
    1. Re:Why??? by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "Why are they supposed to replace it if it does the job?"

      As stated in the article, replacement parts are now becoming too hard to source.

    2. Re:Why??? by EmeraldBot · · Score: 1

      "Why are they supposed to replace it if it does the job?"

      As stated in the article, replacement parts are now becoming too hard to source.

      The very next sentence in my paragraph and I entertain that exact thought. It was more meant as a barb for people who'd throw it out because it's not new, which I don't think is a very good reason - trashing it just because it's old. However, I do sympathize on the parts issue.

      --
      "Set a man a fire, he'll be warm for the rest of the night. Set a man afire, he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
  29. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 1

    So less than 2 dozen schools need to spend upwards of $2 million dollars to... control the HVAC?

    Really?

    That is the bigger issue, IMHO...

    Well, if the new system ends up saving them more than $2 million over its lifespan (hardly a stretch of the imagination, given the cost of heating and cooling large buildings,) wouldn't they be fools to not have done this already?

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  30. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "and the fact that they're no longer willing to let students/staff do it." 'they' probably means the local government union objected to a non-union project.

  31. Amiga stuff is relatively cheap on the bay... by amigabill · · Score: 2

    Parts for the computer are difficult to find, Hopkins said. It is on its second mouse and third monitor.

    Try ebay or Craigs list? Lots of it out there...

    Since this was made by a student, why not have a new student project to replace this thing usign a Pi or *duino board, which are all the rage these days? Or for an even more interesting learning experience, go with a Zed board? Surely those and your free extracurricular club labor would save you a couple bucks?

    1. Re:Amiga stuff is relatively cheap on the bay... by Whorhay · · Score: 3, Informative

      The problem is that the equipment at the 19 buildings is all built to use some kind of radio modem. Apparently retrofitting that equipment to use some more modern means of communication is going to be costly. They've tried to do it before and simply couldn't get around the requirement to continue using those radio modems. The radio modems are the heart of why it needs to be upgraded because they are prone to interference, for example the walkie talkies the staff use interfere and cause the system to not function properly. This equipment is all much older than the Amiga, which it's self was a replacement for another central control unit that was decommissioned because replacement parts were getting to expensive. The Amiga was a good fit because it was actually able to interface with a compatible radio modem.

    2. Re:Amiga stuff is relatively cheap on the bay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Second mouse and third monitor after how many years?

      I think this administrator has a funny sense to reliability. He's probably one of those people who throws away his computer when Windows gets full of crap, convinced the malware has "worn out" his computer in some way.

  32. replacement = $2 mill? by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    Still, if it was something codeable by a student then, the idea that the replacement system would take $2 million is ludicrous. \

    Have a competition for coding, award a $100k prize for the best system code, and implement that (plus give the winner a job for life).

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:replacement = $2 mill? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      simple
      Things where simpler back then. a system to control all this was not in place a the time they made this. Some teacher had a bright kid and said, "let's see if we can have a computer control all the HVACs.
      They had an Amiga which for the time was a very powerful computer "much more so than an x86 dos box running at best a 286" so they did it.
      I would love to know how they are using radio links for this. DTFM over audio?
      Today if they wanted to roll there own they could use some cheap wifi routers and maybe some aurdino clones and use a VPN to keep it all secure.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  33. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, it's the ongoing maintenance. Rtfa. The programmer still lives in the area and goes back to fix it when it breaks. Consider $2m over 30 years.

  34. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, new systems are already remote manageable. That's probably what they're lookin at.

  35. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by DarkKaplah · · Score: 2

    Yeah. You could probably replace the thing with a raspberry pi .... at each location ... with a custom controller card.. and another one to control them all... for about $5,000

    $2M ? Someone's pork barrel overfloweth.

    I think we're all forgetting that the HVAC system as a whole is that old. Pumps, valves, and compressors all have finite life spans. My first reaction was also to use some Rpi's at each location which could add up to under $200 per building I then considered the cost to forklift and upgrade the HVAC at each facility. This would be about right.

    --
    Coffee: The lifeblood of intelligence in civilization.
  36. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    I am going to assume there is a idiot involved in delivering this news and that the budget is for replacing a lot more than just controls.

    I am going to assume that the contractor is the superintendent's brother in-law.

  37. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Which begs the question - if it still works, why replace it?

    Indeed.. they could buy a couple of used Amigas on Ebay. Don't laugh, I've seen it done by corporations who are desperate to support a legacy system.

    Or, better yet, hire the kid (now adult) programmer to port the software to a more modern platform with a more secure method of control than unencrypted RF.

    100k on the programmer, 50k on hardware.. all finished.

  38. Emulator by in10se · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If they are only having problems with the hardware, why not just put an Amiga emulator on a new computer?

    --
    Popisms.com - Connecting pop culture
    1. Re:Emulator by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      They probably have some custom interface boards "I bet using the printer port"

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Emulator by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If they are only having problems with the hardware, why not just put an Amiga emulator on a new computer?

      It doesn't sound like they are really have any real difficulty with the computer.

      FTFA:"Parts for the computer are difficult to find, Hopkins said. It is on its second mouse and third monitor."

      Also FTFA:"Because they share the same frequency as our maintenance communications radios and operations maintenance radios - yes, they do interfere"

      I'm guessing that they could find radios that are on a different frequency for less than 1.5 to 2 million dollars.

      Apparently the student who originally programed it is still in the area and they call him when they have any issues. I hope they at least offer him the Amiga for sentimental reasons when it goes offline. I don't think there are many high-school projects, particularly on this scope, that have worked for so long. And will require over a million dollars to replace. The tax payers of Grand Rapids should thank him.

    3. Re:Emulator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's a printer port?

    4. Re:Emulator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amiga parts are not difficult to find. They're all over the bloody place. Now, the special interface cards which may be in use, though it sounds like the only special thing in place is the radio, may be difficult. TFA says it communicates at 1200 bits, so I might assume it's using a modem connected to the radio.

      Pretty sure replacement radios can be had for less than a couple of million dollars and you don't necessarily need to replace that Amiga's radios -- maybe just change channels on the walkies?? Replace the Amiga? If it's stock, why replace it? Parts ARE available, and any desperately needed parts would probably be donated by another Amigoid trying to keep the dream alive. Another Amiga programmer could step in if the original chap meets an untimely (or timely) demise. How many systems are still running today which were abandoned decades ago and are in similar situations where parts and support are concerned? Where's the promise that the new system will be supported in the following years, near as reliable, and as easily supported?

      But, seriously, two million dollars? I bet that thing has more problems and bugs than the system running now. But not to worry, the next $2 million upgrade will take care of all of those problems.

    5. Re:Emulator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RS-232 (serial port) or Centronics (parallel port) were often used for printers back in the day. Kids these days and their WiFi and Bluetooth appreciate nothing of whence personal computing originated.

    6. Re:Emulator by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Emulation invariably introduces quirks.

      Or worse it removes quirks that the software was counting on to properly run.

    7. Re:Emulator by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I did a little looking.
      It uses an RF modem so in theory an emulator should work fine. Even better would be to "replace" the RF modem with something like an RPi and use a VPN. Or maybe an old PC booting from a flashdrive. You could even keep the RF modem and use it as a fall over.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  39. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by squiggleslash · · Score: 1, Informative

    The alternative to using the term "PC" to describe IBM PCs and their descendants is to use some horribly convoluted terminology, along the lines of "Oh no, this isn't a Mac, this is a computer that implements standards comprising a descendant of the IBM PC architecture."

    PC comes from "IBM PC". While the PC in those five letters were the initials of "Personal Computer", the name referred to a specific family of computers. You wouldn't use "PC/AT" to describe the latest Mac on the grounds that "But... it is a Personal Computer with Advanced Technology!" Likewise, if someone gave you a 3.5" disc in the 1980s and said "This has a PC emulator on it!" you wouldn't say "Ahem, my Amiga already is a personal computer, I don't need to emulate one on it." PC was understood to mean IBM PC based.

    The Commodore Amiga was a personal computer. It was not a PC - well, not unless you added the Sidecar thingie, one of the Zorro 2/3 emulator cards, or ran one of the PC emulators, anyway..

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  40. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not 100% sure it's governmental pork... commercial HVAC control systems can get hella expensive in a hurry, depending on what you're putting in. I suspect it's going to be more than just dropping in a new PC/server/whatever... a buttload of updated sensors and control equipment will likely have to go in along with it (esp. given the age).

    Price it sometime, then scale that cost up for 19 large buildings. $2m comes to roughly $105k per school; as far as buildings of that size go, that ain't half bad.

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  41. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by msauve · · Score: 2

    Of course it is. "PC" and "personal computer" were in use well before the IBM PC came along.

    Even Commodore called it a personal computer.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  42. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Ogive17 · · Score: 1

    While you are probably correct, I am sure there is much more to the story.

    Do we know if the current situation is even efficient? That $2mil might be to upgrade all the systems enough that it will save $100k/yr in more efficient operation.

    If you think about how long they have milked the current system, maybe they do well with their budgets.. just not enough info to decide if $2mil is wasteful.

    --
    "Action without philosophy is a lethal weapon; philosophy without action is worthless."
  43. I really do love everything about this. by netsavior · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I love that a 30 year old computer is doing the job just fine.

    I love that a kid wrote the code ages ago, and presumably it has never even been patched.

    I love that the Amiga was so damn rock solid that it has not had an emergent failure in 30 years.

    I love that it uses walkie talkie beeps as a protocol

    I love that somehow it is going to cost 2 million dollars to reproduce something a kid did in his spare time, presumably simply for the privilege of getting to play with a $1300 dollar computer.

    1. Re:I really do love everything about this. by ledow · · Score: 1

      Dabs.com used to run all their systems from a DEC Alpha with software that the owner created.

      When it was time to replace it, they cocked up the site royally for months even with masses of hardware.

      http://www.channelregister.co....

    2. Re:I really do love everything about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love that it uses walkie talkie beeps as a protocol

      probably illegally, too. back then, an ordinary 'walkie talkie' used one or more channels of CB band (this was before 'family radio'') automated or computer use of those not allowed. if they use old licensed Moto VHF radios and base or similar, still probably not allowed. FCC has always had pretty strict rules regarding use of 'public' and commercial license bands.

    3. Re:I really do love everything about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, doubt many HS kids today would be able to pull something like this off from what I've seen.

  44. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by swv3752 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And what do you do if a part dies? Where are you going to get parts for something that has not been manufactured for 20+ years?

    Obviously it needs to be replaced just so you can have something that can be repaired. The $2mil probably includes upgrading a large part of the HVAC system. If you have a 20+ year old computer controlling the HVAC, then you probably have a 20+ old HVAC.

    --
    Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
  45. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Environmental control and monitoring becomes complicated when you're considering large buildings.

    And yet a high-school student from the 1980's was able to engineer a system with off the shelf computers and a little ingenuity. And managed to build a system that has lasted for 25 years.

  46. Multi zone thermostats? by future+assassin · · Score: 1

    Can't these be replaced with $150 multi zone thermostats?

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
  47. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    Which begs the question - if it still works, why replace it?

    It raises the question. Begging the question means something completely different.

    A bespoke system like this is difficult to modify or expand. It could also crap out at any time, leaving them to scramble for a replacement. It makes sense to replace it. It does not make sense to spend $2M to do so. They should track down the ex-student that wrote the original program, and pay him a few $k to port it to a new device. A Raspberry Pi would be a good choice.

  48. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by msauve · · Score: 3, Informative

    "PC comes from "IBM PC"."

    No, it doesn't. It was in use before there was an IBM PC, along with "personal computer" and "microcomputer." History proves you wrong.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  49. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    I don't doubt a nice HVAC control could save money...

    I just doubt that it needs to cost $2 million dollars...

  50. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember these debates back in 1990-1991 back on comp.sys.amiga.advocacy. Mainly splitting hairs between a "PC" as in a microcomputer, versus the IBM PC and its derivatives (AT clones). Even people said, "I work at it, it is a workstation."

    Funny thing, the Mac/PC/Linux "discussion" that goes on now is tame compared to how fanatic the Amiga people were back then. I remember in college, a classmate posting something questioning the pre-emptive multitasking capabilities of AmigaOS, and a bunch of people E-mailing the sysadmins at the school demanding the guy be expelled or at least banned. There was no more rabid group than the Amiga advocates. Cult of Mac? Relatively tame, and would cower when they got cudgeled in the head repeatedly about System 7 being a non-preemptive OS and could easily require a cold restart if an application didn't do their WaitNextEvent() on time.

    However, time went on, and bouncing a checkered ball while formatting a floppy went from insanely cool to something all operating systems did. The x86 and Mac were behind, but slowly but surely, they got the audio/visual features, not to mention true preemptive multitasking. It might have been 10 years after AmigaOS, but it came around. AmigaOS went from "groundbreakingly awesome" to "great for its time."

    Part of me wishes for those days back when people actually would spend time doing resarch with facts (obvious trolls wound up being removed by their site's admins)... but part of me is glad the over-zealous Amiga crowd (always frothing at the mouth to flame anyone who say anything but high praise of their platform), got tossed in history's ashbin.

  51. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Pi plus some student programmers - should be done for $1500. Which begs the question - if it still works, why replace it?

    In my old house, there was an analog thermostat.

    This thermostat came with the house, probably cost $20, and worked just fine.

    Me, being the foolhardy spendthrift I am, dropped TEN TIMES that on a fancy-shmancy programmable thing with all sorts of stupid, complicated bits inside.

    As it turns out, my previous model--while perfectly functional--was really quite inefficient, and the new unit had pretty much paid for itself within a few weeks.

    Doing things properly can save tons of money.

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  52. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Environmental control and monitoring becomes complicated when you're considering large buildings. At that size you need a system that controls how much your heat plant or cooling system is producing, as well as controlling fans and baffles to ensure that the cooking classroom, with a dozen ovens operating(or 30 computers) on the 3rd floor of the sunny side of the building stays comfortably cool while the the traditional English room on the shaded side of the first floor doesn't actually freeze.

    Uhh...yeah, we get all that. So care to tell me why the current bullshit system has been deemed acceptable for three fucking decades?

    The reason it's $2M is the amount of programming and equipment replacement necessary, standard government waste, and the fact that they're no longer willing to let students/staff do it.

    No, the reason it's $2M is because jobs, jobs, and jobs. Oh yeah, and jobs. Don't forget about jobs. It's all about job creation, whether it's needed or not.

    Nevermind the fact that a few Pi boards could likely replace the whole damn thing and it could be a killer school project. Nope, jobs, jobs, and jobs.

  53. $2M Breakdown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $1000 for hardware, the rest is licensing fees for Windows.

  54. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    The term is overloaded. Live with it. It can mean a general "personal computer" (microcomputer, typically), or an IBM-PC clone.

  55. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    Really?

    The article isn't exactly clear on what "system" is being replaced. Boilers, air con units, etc - all might need an upgrade.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  56. Can't just look at cost without looking at efficie by perpenso · · Score: 1

    Yeah. You could probably replace the thing with a raspberry pi .... at each location ... with a custom controller card.. and another one to control them all... for about $5,000. $2M ? Someone's pork barrel overfloweth.

    A pi was my first thought too. :-)

    While you are probably correct that there is a bit of profit in that quote, its seems everyone is only looking at one half of the equation. What about the other side, increased efficiency and the cost savings that would result?

    It is plausible that over another 30 year timespan the cost of the new system could be outweighed by the savings it generates. I'm not saying this is surely the case, just part of the equation that is being overlooked so we don't really have enough information to judge the project.

    That said, pi's and clocks and temperature sensors and etc are fairly inexpensive. A modernized more comprehensive student built system could be an awesome project. The school could have a computer engineering club that maintains and enhances the system. The education benefit may easily outweigh any additional benefit a high tech commercial installation might offer. This education benefit would include something terribly lacking in traditional CS/CE programs, an appreciation for maintaining existing software.

  57. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    A pi with some shell scripts controlling commercial scale heating and cooling system?

    No.

    Fuck no.

    Jesus fucking christ no.

    This isn't your home automation project were the worst thing that goes wrong is you don't get to spy on your cat while you're at work.

    This is a serious deployment controlling a whole lot of non-trivial hardware. More importantly it's pivotal to the operation of the school itself. Fuck up the climate control for a week during any kind of unusual weather and you'll beg for a 2 million dollar fix when you need to unfuck the whole school year so your students can get their mandated educational hours.

    2M quote isn't to replace some old amiga with an equivalent off the shelf PC. Considering they'll have to evaluate the entire system from boilers to blowers to ensure that it can be coupled properly with a modern control unit that's really not out of hand. They will probably have to replace some equipment that's incompatible or broken. That's a lot of man hours from skilled professionals. That's probably a lot of specialized not-cheap equipment too.

    Also don't forget this is a school. Regulations regarding health and safety are much more strict. They're probably required to bring anything they touch up to current code by law. (This alone is why you see schools chugging along in really old buildings with really old infrastructure. Cost of code updates exceeds the cost of building whole new buildings. Renovations are essentially impossible.)

  58. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Watch the video, eBay is where they got the (replacement) Amiga.

  59. 30 years and no Guru Meditation? by tekrat · · Score: 2

    My Amiga would crash if I looked at it funny (then again, I had all kinds of things rigged up to it) -- although I remember doing the most amazing crap *ever* on a computer with that old Amiga 1000... Seriously, that was a wonderful, wonderful piece of hardware, and there's never been anything like it, even to this day. Dynamic ramdisk? We still don't have that in any other operating system.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    1. Re:30 years and no Guru Meditation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Amiga would crash when ever my wife looked at it funny. They probably both had reason.

    2. Re:30 years and no Guru Meditation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dynamic ramdisk? We still don't have that in any other operating system.

      Both ramfs/tmpfs are dynamic ramdisks on linux, with the only difference being that tmpfs enforces the size limit while ramfs doesn't.

    3. Re:30 years and no Guru Meditation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went to technical (electronics and computers) college 20 years ago and I had an Amiga 2000. There were only two of us, everyone else used PCs. But I was the only one who handed in lab reports with scope screen shots. Digi View and security camera pointed at a tube scope.

    4. Re:30 years and no Guru Meditation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen your wife, I don't blame the Amiga.

    5. Re:30 years and no Guru Meditation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell yes! The Amiga had an interface done right. A GUI first with shell windows for command line input. Not this stupid fucking 1970s UNIX / Windows 9x bullshit of running a GUI on top of a command line. Fuck you, X, fuck you~!

    6. Re:30 years and no Guru Meditation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For dynamic "ramdisk" there's tmpfs on Linux, for ages now. It's even swappable.

    7. Re:30 years and no Guru Meditation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dynamic ramdisk? We still don't have that in any other operating system.

      RAM: was great -- I was only able to use Lattice/SAS C on my A500 by doing stage 1 to RAM: and then swapping disks and doing stage 2. However, the claim that we still don't have that in any other operating system is false. UNIX has had that in the form of tmpfs, swapfs, or the like for probably as long as I can remember (can't say if it predates the Amiga, since I didn't start seriously using UNIX until I admitted that the Amiga was a dead-end). As a UNIX admin, my first action on any Solaris box was to disable /tmp on tmpfs (or whatever it was called; the installation default), as it was the primary source of instability on those systems (filling up /tmp is not uncommon, and can be done by any user). Modern variants are a little more robust, with at least some better limits and less intense common usage (my current Linux system uses it for some low-resource kernel features, not /tmp). Also, with some buffering mechanisms, a disk-based file system is just as fast (faster, since the initial copy from disk is on-demand), and just as unreliable (because the speed is due to never/rarely syncing to media).

      Also, nobody said there was no system crash in 30 years. Apparently the original programmer maintained the software to this day.

  60. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds more like a total system replacement/upgrade. Probably some of that stuff is well over 60 years old and full of asbestos. With the power usage to go along with it.

    2 million bucks for 16 buildings? If it is a total replacement/upgrade it may actually be a good deal...

  61. hey by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I love how they're paying millions for something you can easily pull off with some SDR's and RasPi's.

  62. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ledow · · Score: 3, Informative

    I do the IT for schools.

    The largest, most complex heating system I've ever seen is a bunch of thermostats, pumps, temperature sensors and boiler start-up times in a piece of crappy HTML running on a boiler control system which costs 1% of what the heating system cost (and most of that shit is software licensing and support, not programming).

    Seriously, it gives a nice diagram with all the in and out temperatures for multiple boilers, spread over the entire site, with temperature reading for other places (including external), and a "program" (really just a table of values) for when to start up in the morning depending on what the outside temperature is and/or whether the system's water temperature is ramping up as normal in that area.

    Honestly, the control part is fucking simple. It's not so simple to have something controlling 30-year-old systems that still running on a 30-year-old system, but the actual job it's doing is pretty minimal.

    A modern system might run proper cabling to / wireless sensors that don't interfere but would basically be the same thing. More likely, the system is just being replaced completely, including the majority of the HVAC equipment (or at least the centralised units if not the ducts / outlets / radiators / whatever).

    In all the schools I've ever worked there are rooms full of boilers all over that cost millions. Usually they are run from a control panel with a tiny microprocessor and - if you're lucky - some kind of serial or Ethernet controller somewhere.

    The hard part is not the software, or the schedules, or the algorithms involved, it's keeping the system running and integrating the parts you want to work with the system you want. Boiler manufacturers on that scale tend to want you to buy their controllers, and won't play well with anything else without a huge premium on the hardware.

  63. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Whorhay · · Score: 1

    I believe much of the HVAC system is actually much older than the Amiga. The Amiga was a replacement for an older refrigerator sized system which was decommissioned because of it's climbing costs. The old HVAC systems at the other buildings all rely on using radio modems to relay instructions. That radio modem system is actually thecrux of the problem as it is subject to interference from simple walkie talkies. Replacing those modems with something more modern is likely to be the expensive part of the project as it'll require custom hardware and who knows how much manpower to get it to work with the ancient systems. Replacing the Amiga that controls it all is probably going to be the smallest expense of the whole thing.

  64. not to simple new EMS = new system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Installing a modern EMS system will require compatible controls. This one component will trigger upgrades throughout the system. So it's really not as simple as getting someone to program a rasberry pi as all modern environmental systems have propitiatory controls. I would even argue the software programmed by said student was more monitoring software than a management system.

  65. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FYI - I actually am a HVAC Design Engineer. Modern DDC controls systems are much more complex than simple thermostats. Modern energy codes require many energy savings strategies.

    Outdoor air reset is typically required, which can vary the output temperature of a boiler based on outdoor air temperature. Condensing boilers are most efficient at lower temperatures, so there can be significant energy savings.
    Supply air temperature reset can vary the discharge air temperature from an AHU in reheat systems to still satisfy zones calling for cooling while limiting the amount of reheat needed in zones calling for heat.
    Fan pressure optimization will constantly poll damper position from all zones on a variable speed system. It will slow down the VFD (variable speed drives) until one or more zones have a 100% open control damper. This lowers the pressure in the system and energy usage.
    Variable speed pumping systems (heating or cooling) can do the same thing by slowing down pumps until one or more control valves are fully open.
    Airside economizer systems can bring in outdoor air for cooling when temperatures are favorable and turn off compressors used for cooling. These can also take relative humidity into account in addition to outdoor air temperature when deciding when to operate in economizer mode.
    Waterside economizer can do similar things to shut off compressors on hydronic systems when outdoor conditions are favorable.

    All of these things are good practice, and many are required by code. The other being overlooked is controls are expensive. An inexact rule of thumb that has been used in this area is $1,000 per point. Each damper position, valve position, zone temperature, temperature setpoint, etc. is a point. In a VAV system you might have around 5 points for each zone. If the school has 25 classrooms, a gym, cafetaria, a couple corridors and a half zonen offices, that would be 35 zones or about $175,000. And that is before the air handling units, boilers, chillers, pumps, exhaust fans, etc. are considered. It adds up very quickly.

    Full disclosure - I also double as the office IT guy. This is not only the computer/server cost, this cost can include wiring, dampers, control valves, thermostats, sensors, programming, generating graphics, etc. The computer running the front end software will be a small portion of this cost.

  66. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by retchdog · · Score: 2

    Well, at least this student did. God only knows what kind of unholy messes the others made. Or, for that matter, how much cost accrued silently through inefficiencies over 25 years.

    --
    "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
  67. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My seventh grade Apple II teacher in 1983 called my Commodore VIC-20 a toy in front of the class. That's when I learned that I came from a "poor" family because we couldn't afford an Apple II. My parents got me a Commodore 64 the following year. I went through three C64 in the next ten years. My first PC after college was literally an old IBM PC/AT (286) that a roommate brought home work in 1995.

  68. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Threni · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't know; I took 14 seconds to create an account. Why don't you?

  69. Tour of GRWWTP in the 90's used C64 by OrangeTide · · Score: 2

    When I was going to GRCC (Grand Rapids Community College) in the late-90s I took a tour of the Grand Rapids Wastewater Treatment Plant (GRWWTP). They still used two commodore 64's (or were they 128's) to log sensor measurements for different pollutants. I believe for metals used in the automotive and chrome industry. They were nearly black they were caked with so much dirt and dust, but were still chugging along showing status on the attached TV monitor.

    At the time (in my early 20s) I thought it was silly they were using such old computers. But now I think that as long as it keeps working there is no reason to replace it. When they eventually break they will need to be repaired or replaced, and likely replacement will be cheaper as the support for that platform is long gone. They'll use some fancy embedded computer, and it will chug along for 20 years and by that time, whatever embedded vendor they used is unlikely to assist in any way other than full replacement.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  70. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1, Interesting

    And what do you do if a part dies? Where are you going to get parts for something that has not been manufactured for 20+ years?

    eBay, there is a TON of that stuff out there... the prices are cheap as well...

  71. remotely managible by davidwr · · Score: 2

    Remote, as in from China. Sigh.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  72. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by zlives · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think it is PC to call all PC's PC

  73. Quality construction by davidwr · · Score: 1

    I give credit to the lead in the solder for the hardware lasting that long.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  74. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 2

    Why would it need to be replaced? It doesn't need USB, Bluetooth, Firewire, et al. No compelling reason to replace it.

    My music project studio is running on Windows for Workgroups. All I need is MIDI. I don't need software plugins (I use hardware for that), I don't want it connected to the internet, I don't use it for any sampling or sample playback. And that's a circa 1993 machine that still works.

    --
    Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
    1. Re:If it ain't broke, don't fix it. by sound+vision · · Score: 1
      About their plans to replace it...

      "There’s a lot of projects, a lot of needs in the district, so there’s other priorities we have to put in place ahead of this,” Hopkins said. “This system is still running."

      TFA doesn't give any particular timeline, but it sounds like they are betting on it running for a few more years.

      As for the need to overhaul the system eventually, reasons might be something like: Scarcity of parts increasing, parts and labor for working on this crufty system being outside of their established maintenance and IT contracts (meaning extra delays and extra cost when something finally does break.) Going without heat for weeks while they find+hire someone who can debug assembly on an Amiga might not be acceptable. The computer system communicates with the hardware by RF - probably without any kind of encryption. The same frequency bands are used by maintenance walkie-talkies, and TFA mentions the maintenance guys having to work around that by "OK, Nobody use the radios for the next 15 minutes so that we don't interfere with the HVAC system." All this sounds pretty compelling to me.
      My guess is that the $1.5m - $2m cost cited is for a complete overhaul of the district's climate systems, not just to replace the Amigas. If the rest of the system is as old as the computers, there's probably a lot that needs replacing. At that point, building a cathedral of cruft around an Amiga on life support will be the thing they have no compelling reason to do.

  75. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Tipa · · Score: 5, Informative

    The original programmer is still around, and occasionally does some maintenance on the programmer -- he even comments extensively in the comment section for the linked news story about the specific challenges they face. (He's "Jeff").

    The $2MM will be used for a general upgrade of all the heating/cooling facilities, which will include more modern control systems. Many of the systems that used to be controlled by the Amiga have already been replaced, and the Amiga doesn't manage those any more :)

  76. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I used to work for an HVAC controls company. Most controls contractors have a specialty, whether it be hospitals, schools, commercial offices, or whatever. The one I worked for specialized in schools. We would typically get the entire school district's business all at once, but individual buildings would be upgraded or added to over time. But occasionally, we would get a large project that involved multiple buildings or an entire take-over of a whole district's HVAC controls.

    I have personally seen, held, and deposited a check for over $1 million from one such project. And that was the 20% kick-off payment. We outfitted 11 schools with complete direct-digital controls (none of that old pneumatic stuff), a web-facing control server, and a bunch of wire-runs to connect it all together. The price (as you may have calculated) was around $5 million. This was 10+ years ago, too.

    That project covered a high school, 2 middle schools, and 8 elementary schools. The district administration offices were on the high school campus as well, and were part of the same system that covered the high school building itself.

    The high school had (from memory):
    - 300+ fan powered terminals (zone controller and thermostat for each)
    - 7 or 8 air handling units (multi-program controller for each)
    - 12 roof-top units (single-program controller for each)
    - 1 network bridge
    - 1 web-facing server

    The middle schools had:
    - 150 FPT zones (average)
    - 3 or 4 AHU's each
    - 6-8 RTU's each
    - 1 network bridge each

    The elementary schools had:
    - 50 FPT zones (average)
    - 1 or 2 AHU's each
    - 3 or 4 RTU's each
    - 1 network bridge each

    All told, parts for that project cost us around $2-to-2.5 million. We generally bid things with a 100% markup over parts costs, which covered labor, design, documentation, management, and everything else. This company was and is profitable, but isn't making anyone wildly rich.

    There is no pork in that barrel. It just costs money to build something like that.

  77. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by msauve · · Score: 1

    As proof of my claim, I present the "NEC PC-8001," which preceded the IBM PC by 2 years. "PC" does not refer exclusively to IBM PCs, although after they were introduced they were often called just "PCs." Then there were "PC clones," and "PC compatibles," and "PC" most often referred to that architecture, because most of the PCs were that type. But not exclusively, and such usage was clear from context. The Amiga can properly be referred to as a PC.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  78. And... by davidwr · · Score: 1

    ... regulatory compliance.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  79. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Megane · · Score: 1

    Shame on me for RTFA, but yes, the $2M is for a complete replacement. The original system also used some custom RF hack to talk to the various buildings that operates on the same frequency as maintenance's walkie-talkies. But who could resist the opportunity for fresh pork spending? School administrators just love off-cycle bond elections with catchy names like "Warm, Safe and Dry" that few people show up for so they have a big fat piggy bank to spend.

    --
    #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  80. That's one PC that won't easily get hacked. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lolol

    Heck; if it still ain't broke, why fix it? :)

  81. Explanation from the Original Programmer by CWCheese · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This was posted to the Disqus comments, it appears to be from a man named Jeff who is likely the original programmer. He did post another response that talked about some problems he encountered in recent years testing an emulation solution. Bravo to this man Jeff for sticking by his system for the entire lifecycle.

    When the Amiga system originally went in it was controlling well over 100 buildings throughout the district, including the entire GRCC campus at the time. The Amiga replaced the head-end of the system, which was experiencing expensive hardware failures every year ... and you couldn't get parts for that mini-computer on e-bay. It is essentially acting as a huge database (schedules, configurations, control programs, history, etc.), system manager, and monitoring system ("head-end") for the remaining 19 buildings HVAC systems. If the Amiga goes down, the buildings will continue to operate using the configurations last received, with most of the individual device controls being able to be manually overridden inside each building, albeit with less energy efficiency. What you will loose is the ability to change schedules/custom control code/configurations and the ability to centrally monitor the performance of the buildings.

    Each building has one or more local control systems, and those systems communicate back to the central head-end over radio-modem (there was no district-wide network back then). Schedule and other control changes are sent to the buildings and alerts/reports are sent back. That old equipment in the buildings, even older than the Amiga, is what dictates the radio communications link. They incorporate specific protocols for keying up the radio that are not directly compatible with a newer serial to Ethernet type device that would seem like a logical replacement.

    The control systems themselves gather temperatures, both inside and outside the building, look at trends and do predictive control of the equipment to accomodate scheduled use of various areas of each building. For the day, this was very advanced building control and offered significant energy savings, as well as comfort in the buildings.

    Over time, as buildings have been updated, sold or replaced, the local controls withing those buildings have been replaced with newer/more modern controls that communicate with newer central control systems. Replacing these controls that are local to the buildings is what is responsible for the majority of the cost I would say.

    As far as the Amiga system itself, I believe most of the components are still the original. The hard drive may have failed twice over the years, requiring a rebuild from backups. They did pick up or have donated a few Amiga systems to use as parts as needed, but the system has proven to be very resilient. Obviously, Monitors, Keyboards and Mice can only take so much use without needing to be replaced. Without this, the system likely would have become inoperable and unservicable many years ago, or been incredibly expensive to keep running.

    From a technical stand point, the Amiga was selected because at the time it was the only "Personal Computer" (PC) that had a true pre-emptive multi-taskng operating system. It needed to be able to handle multiple processes simultaneously, including interfacing with the systems, maintaining settings in the database, monitoring the system as well as support for both local and remote access to the system simultaneously. Basically, its capabilities fit the need. While for nostalgia reasons I would hate to see it go, it has been 30 years and I think the system has done its job. Replacing a building's control system doesn't happen overnight, and when you are talking 19 buildings with ancient (yes I am calling myself ancient I guess) control systems, it is going to take money and time. The payback in energy savings, comfort and safe control of the buildings though I think justifies the cost.

    --
    Have a Day!
    1. Re:Explanation from the Original Programmer by Cramer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      TL;DR... the HVAC systems are ancient.

      The $2mil is replacing all that ancient crap, not just what the amiga has been maintaining for decades. I don't want to think what's controlling this place. (it's 30 years old, and the plenum confirms that!)

    2. Re:Explanation from the Original Programmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From a technical stand point, the Amiga was selected because at the time it was the only "Personal Computer" (PC) that had a true pre-emptive multi-taskng operating system. It needed to be able to handle multiple processes simultaneously, including interfacing with the systems, maintaining settings in the database, monitoring the system as well as support for both local and remote access to the system simultaneously. Basically, its capabilities fit the need.

      @ CW: Had he ever considered using Microware's Level 2 OS-9 as a replacement for the Amiga's native operating system, do you know?

  82. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I blame Apple for this misuse.

    Yeah it was used colloquially to refer to Wintel boxes before the ads, but Wintel has it's followers as well, and has for years before then as well. stretching back to the windows 3.0 days.

    And the whole "PC Master Race" thing has taken it out of control

    and the GP post illustrates the Apple ads bringing that mentality into play very well for me here. "I'm a Mac and I'm a PC"... you're both PCs. in ther personal computer term. HECK the APPLE IIe was a "Personal Computer". I find it funny that the company that's oft claimed to "have made the PC Personal" (see reviews of Macintosh circa 1984-1985 era, notably in BYTE magazine, I had an old copy from I believe October 1984 that had that exact phrase), scoffs at the term. It's something that annoys me personally. Looking at the hardware the only difference between a Mac and a PC these days is the OS. So yeah a Mac is a PC... as is a commodore 64... Sinclair ZX-80, the Altair 8000, and the Heathkit monstrosities of the 1970s.

  83. I still have two Amigas (500 and 1200) by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 4, Funny

    I still have two Amigas (500 and 1200). IM me and you can have both of them for just $500K - that's a savings of $1M over your upgrade costs! /snark>

  84. Well by Lirodon · · Score: 1

    I've been to bowling alleys that actually had scoreboard displays/backends that ran on Amiga computers. Sadly, they've all dropped them in favor of other systems.

  85. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by steam_cannon · · Score: 1

    This seems like a reasonable price estimate to me. Sure $90,000 per school sounds steep, but consider the following: 1. If the computer hasn't been updated, nothing has been updated since 1980, so there is no way we're talking about just a computer. Their custom fan rigs and AC is probably all about to die along with that computer. 2. It's all custom hardware, have you ever heard of a radio controlled thermostat for a school district? Yeahhh, no. Kids would hack it so fast if they knew the school was running something like that. So this is all local made lowest budget hardware, probably because the school couldn't afford an amiga for each school and it's all hardware that can't be simply connected to a modern HVAC control system. 3. And don't forget the cost of hiring a crew to install all the hardware and get it working in 24 schools before the school year starts! Priceless. Based on what I know about big projects, this all sounds quite reasonable to me.

  86. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by matfud · · Score: 1

    Now you just get Intel vs AMD or graphics cards (but they are the same names now)

  87. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The second model of the commodore 64 actually had "Personal Computer" written in plain view.

  88. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't have a fucking clue what you're talking about, sit down and shut up.

  89. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or maybe they do have one. Some of us post under our names AND anonymously, which you should know by now, considering your UID.

  90. A true multiprocess-capable thermostat at that by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    "Amiga -- It's what the Apple iThermostat should have been."

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  91. students learning and making for their school by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a novel idea. Too bad it's getting completely skipped over by our current school systems run by administrations which think it's better to consume than train and use. Can you imagine what the level of computer science would be like if our schools were teaching kids things like making 3D printer and the like instead of teaching them how to be consumers of COTS versions? Same goes for software.

  92. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by weilawei · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How the bloody hell did you go through *three* of them? I only had one, and it lasted until I gave it away many years later.

    You could murder someone with a Commodore 64 after fishing it out of a swimming pool filled with beer and it would still run fine.

  93. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ScentCone · · Score: 2

    And yet a high-school student from the 1980's was able to engineer a system with off the shelf computers and a little ingenuity. And managed to build a system that has lasted for 25 years.

    And for all we know, it could be so blindingly inefficient that it's cost the school system hundreds of thousands or millions in wasted energy over that quarter century. See how uninformed assertions work?

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  94. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

    The irony is that while "PC" often refers to machines running Windows, a free-software unix box is often much more personalized, due to both software capabilities and the user's interests.

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  95. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't doubt a nice HVAC control could save money...

    I just doubt that it needs to cost $2 million dollars...

    I doubt it does either, but without knowing the specific parameters of the bid, it's hard to say what it needs to cost, or whatever is being delivered.

    I doubt it is as simple as a single computer somewhere that's connected to all the relevant units though. It may be fixing a multitude of issues, addressing a number of problems, and otherwise cleaning house.

    Sure, that broom might only cost ME 10 bucks, but perhaps the janitor is also doing a lot of other things when sweeping up.

    We don't know though, as that information is presumably a problem for interested journalists.

  96. Asbestos: just leave it by magarity · · Score: 1

    and removing asbestos

    Sure, the blown asbestos messes up your lungs when it's blowing around but after it's in place? It makes a good insulator and about the best fire retardant ever. Leave it in place.

  97. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by steam_cannon · · Score: 1

    Why replace it if it works today? All their systems are probably as old as that computer so the whole shebang is becoming less and less reliable. Having the heat kick off in the winter can be a problem. Damage from the heat going off over a winter break could easily be over a couple million. Also kids will hack the heck out of it now that the cat is out of the bag that the whole system goes down if a walkie talkie is left on in the area. And cell phone signals might be messing up their radio system too and a lot of people have cell phones these days. Plus blasting a whole school district with modem communication over walkie talkie frequency probably breaks a few FTC rules. So to me, this sounds like a system that was put in due to budget desperation but it's not a good system for the school district to keep using.

  98. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > So less than 2 dozen schools need to spend upwards of $2 million dollars to... control the HVAC?
    >
    > Really?

    No, not really. Of course. What, do you believe drama "news" headlines?

    They are rebuilding an ancient air conditioning system. The control computer is a fly's shit in that $1M project (you do understand "upwards of $2M" is drama news code for $1M, right?) Of course the /. headline will over-dramatize that. Learn some media skills, huh?

  99. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the Johnson Controls modem goes however... that is a different story.

  100. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Minwee · · Score: 5, Funny

    You could murder someone with a Commodore 64 after fishing it out of a swimming pool filled with beer and it would still run fine.

    Yes, after you replaced the power supply.

  101. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

    The C64 self-destructed after 3.3 years of constant everyday use for writing, programming and video games. I had to send the floppy drive out to a repair shop after the voltage regulator shorted out. The EPSON NLQ dot matrix lasted another five years before I got a laser printer for my PC.

  102. So they've got several problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. They use hardware without access to replacement parts
    2. They use a proprietary program to control the HVAC
    3. They use a radio modem that interferes with current use of the frequency band

    Solutions:
    1. Replace the Amiga with off the shelf hardware. An embedded boards running Linux or a PC, I don't care.
    2. Make the programmer port the code to that hardware using only standard APIs (i.e. don't write some registers to flip a GPIO but use /sys/class/gpio instead)
    3. Use GSM modems. Yes, there will be running costs for the SIM cards.

  103. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 1

    And for all we know, it could be so blindingly inefficient that it's cost the school system hundreds of thousands or millions in wasted energy over that quarter century. See how uninformed assertions work?

    I must have missed the part in my post where I commented on how efficient the system was. I was replying the the GP who stated that the HVAC systems were complex and the issue was with keeping proper temperatures in the different zones of the buildings.

  104. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeaaaaaah, not usually. The PLA would sometimes croak, the power supplies were awful, the keyboards have a tendency to go wonky. There are loads of issues that a lot of C64 machines can have. Commodore were masters of sleeping together machines from all sorts of parts that other companies would bin. I loved my C64, and have several today, but more than half of them were DOA when I landed them in my collection/parts closet.

  105. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    the new unit had pretty much paid for itself within a few weeks

    Woah. You saved $200 on heating costs in a few weeks? Just your savings represents about 2 months of heating costs for me, during the winter. What, exactly, was your old thermostat doing? Did you have to use cash money to light the pilot light?

  106. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But the people who use them as personal desktop machines often have no personality to speak of, so I'm not sure there's really a good point to make there.

  107. I might be missing something but.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just buy a new Amiga?

    1. Re:I might be missing something but.. by LocalH · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure they don't make Amigas anymore. And no, the PPC "Amiga" boards (not accelerators, but the boards with no classic hardware) don't count.

      --
      FC Closer
  108. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Only PC can call another PC PC

  109. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doing things even more properly can save you even more money. A programmable thermostat can be had for 20 bucks. 30 bucks for a good one.

    Sure, it would look like any old thermostat and wouldn't have any bells and whistles. But those bells and whistles cost money, not save it.

  110. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Don't forget that a cooling tower shutdown, even because of a minor bug, can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in chiller replacement alone. (Chillers will burst from pressure due to heat buildup, causing the rest of the chiller to come apart as well. It's similar to how a land mine causes a tank to come apart. You'll usually lose several other nearby expensive pieces of equipment at the same time.) Then add deadheaded pump replacement, valve replacement (too-high pressure trashes the packing), and all of the other fun that comes with it (cleanup from burst pipes, water leaks, and worst of all, refrigerant leaks).

    $2 million is nothing.

  111. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    The Amiga was a personal computer (lower case) but it never had "PC" as part of it's name like the IBM PC did. No one referred to "Personal Computer" at the time with uppercase letters except when it was part of the computer's name (upper case makes it a proper noun). As an acronym, I don't recall "PC" ever being used to describe the generic class of microcomputers.

    In other words, the Amiga, Apple II, and IBM PC were all personal computers but only one of those could be called a Personal Computer or PC. This isn't just my view, compare how things are described on the wikipedia pages talking about Apple II for instance; they use "personal computer" when speaking generically and "PC" when talking about the IBM PC or PC clones. There was never any confusion about this in 1985, games were marketed as being for "PC and Amiga" for example.

    The confusion never arose until the "PC clone" was used as a shorthand for "IBM PC clone" and then things became murky. Now "PC" is an insult to call something that when it is not an IBM PC clone. PC fans don't understand this because they don't understand the insult.

  112. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

    ...and then spend the remaining $1,975,000 fixing all the security breaches and viruses that suddenly have access to your system now that its conveniently on the internet and running on familiar hardware.

  113. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by weilawei · · Score: 1

    To be fair, I repeatedly rebuilt my joystick, which was about the simplest possible piece of electronics you could attach to it. And the power bricks were crappy, but I got lucky on all counts. I've had to rebuild Apple power bricks an obscene numbers of times (small shitty wires, virtually no strain relief, etc.), but I never had to do that for my C64.

    I did repeatedly have to drain the keyboard and clean it, inside and out. Never died on me though. I was speaking from experience about the beer...

  114. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by imidan · · Score: 1

    'they' probably means the local government union objected to a non-union project.

    Could be. On the other hand, it could just be because they'd like a system with a formal service contract, warrantee, liability insurance, etc. Having some former student come back to the school occasionally to perform incantations over a Commodore may not inspire great confidence that the system is well in hand. What if something goes horribly wrong with the system and causes damage to the building? May not be Jeff's fault, but Jeff may be involved in the legal fallout.

  115. Who here wouldn't do the fix for less? by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Something like this could probably be controlled by some fucking ardunios... so why the hell are they replacing the amigas with a 2 million dollar system when clearly a fucking high school student in the 80s could make something that worked?

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:Who here wouldn't do the fix for less? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if you take the time to learn the full facts of the situation, you realize that maybe it is just a bit more complicated than swapping out the single Amiga.

      They're not just buying some computer that costs X dollars and some software that costs Y dollars, but overhauling the whole system since there have been some issues that have arisen simply from the process of updating failure HVAC components, but also from other changes to technology, including issues with the wireless modems being used.

      You might as well complain that the local school system is spending 250,000 upgrading its broadcast room when they originally bought a camera for only 2500 dollars.

      So what if they did? It's not even as simple as them buying a new camera, but reworking a whole setup.

      But hey, you could have figured this out from reading the numerous comments similar to yours that have already been posted and spared us yet another example of redundancy.

      Can we get a refund for that?

  116. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    But "personal computer" is not the same as "PC", and not the same as "Personal Computer". Commodore never used the PC acronym in its marketing or branding. PC was used primarily as a brand name, part of actual trademarks (and not just by IBM).

    At work those near me work in the Advanced Systems Services group. I do not call them the ASS group even though that could be their acronym. So similarly, PC as an acronym is not always interchangeable with "personal computer".

  117. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 4, Interesting

    >a classmate posting something questioning the pre-emptive multitasking capabilities of AmigaOS

    Yes. The Amiga ran on a 68000. The 68000 didn't support instruction restart. So you couldn't properly do preemptive multitasking with it. It needed the applications to cooperate with the interruptions. So an application could undermine the preemption. The 68010 fixed this problem. There were also unix based 68000 workstations that had two 68000s, one running a clock cycle behind the other, so the state of the CPU could be rewound and the instruction restarted when necessary.

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  118. semi-updated by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    A replacement has been budgeted by the school system, estimated cost: Between $1.5 and 2 million

    I can replace it for half that if you let me use a NeXT computer.

    1. Re:semi-updated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd let you use a NeXT computer for less than 5000 dollars.

      Why do you want to pay between 750,000 and a million dollars to use one?

      Or did you think that bid was only for the control computer?

  119. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boilers are easy for HVAC controls. They mostly do their own thing. They maintain an output hot water (or steam, sometimes) temperature.

    The HVAC control system just measures the supply hot water temperature, then controls everything else accordingly.

    Nobody in the HVAC controls business wants the life-safety issues of direct boiler control.

  120. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by painandgreed · · Score: 2

    I'm not 100% sure it's governmental pork...

    Get with the program! If it's not your own state/county/town, then it's always "pork"!

  121. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by weez75 · · Score: 2

    A school district of that size can save that much in a single year on their electric bill with an intelligent HVAC system.

    I don't sell HVAC systems but I've seen this happen firsthand in a school district. Proper energy management programs are critical.

    85% or so of a school district budget goes directly to personnel. That piece of the budget is considering operating expense. Other operating expenses? Transportation, energy, internet, phone, etc. The other piece of the budget is capital--used for buildings, equipment over a certain threshold or life expectancy. In most states there are very strict rules and amounts of money provided for both operating budgets and capital budgets. You can't co-mingle money between the two buckets--you can't pay teachers out of capital funds for instance.

    So a $2M capital purchase that saves $2M in operating expenses directly impacts a district's ability to put teachers in the classroom. Then the HVAC system is a fixed asset, depreciated over the life expectancy of the building or buildings it serves and the financial impact on the budget is lessened.

    As a taxpayer you may not care about this mundane detail and only want to scream about the expense. A more proper response is to scream to your state legislature about this arcane set of rules that forces school districts to make decisions like this.

    --
    Of course we torture people, we need the information --Gen. Pinochet
  122. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Yeah, you're just going to have to sit in the sweltering heat during summer school until ThunderfuckThor69 sends us the PSU we need for a 30 year old computer made by a company very few of you have ever heard of."

    Yeah, that'd go over well with me as a kid. Or my parents.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  123. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shhh, you're letting actual information get in the way of the incessantly whining republitarians who want to close all public schools.

  124. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > system has been running 24/7 for decades

    Someone offer Jeff a job! Anyone who programs a system that doesn't need to be replaced for 20+ years is worth his salt. Doing it as a student? That's rare indeed.

  125. Correct by Pollux · · Score: 2

    You are correct. HVAC is ridiculously expensive. Unlike the computer marketplace, there are a very limited supply of HVAC solutions, and many (not all) of the vendors like to keep their circuit and programming technology proprietary.

    We just bid out the controller circuits for our school's HVAC system this year in our school district. We have two buildings joined by a hallway on a common campus; 38 blowers and over a hundred dampers control air flow into each room in the building, and each needs a control circuit. Estimated cost was $150,000. Mind you, this cost is -strictly- for control circuits and software to manage them. (Our elementary building had HVAC equipment that was only 10 years old, and 23 years old in the high school. The equipment works fine, but when the circuits were upgraded with the construction of the elementary school in 2005, the contractor used an HVAC control solution that was already outdated. We could only find one vendor in the whole state that was able to service the system.)

    For 19 buildings, $2 million is certainly reasonable.

    1. Re:Correct by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      > and many (not all) of the vendors like to keep their circuit and programming technology proprietary.

      I would kickstart or donate to a HVAC trade school to come up with a better mousetrap.

      Send them 100 arduinos, some actuators and HVAC equipment. Open source it. If you want it the source is there and free and you can run with it. If you would rather just pay someone to do it a company will probably spring up to provide that.

      Some mesh networking, power drops and the whole thing is up and operational for cheap.

  126. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    Controlled by an RS232 port?? Just run the program under an emulator hosted by a *nix box. Done! Move on.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  127. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Controlling the HVAC" is a fairly considerable thing in institutional and commercial buildings, and while the Amiga is the highest-level controller in these systems, I imagine it is controlling a lot of other legacy hardware behind it. Pumps, chillers, boilers, pneumatically-modulated valves and dampers...the $2m likely involves upgrades to a lot more than the Amiga.

    This isn't like a home A/C...

  128. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by lgw · · Score: 3, Interesting

    o one referred to "Personal Computer" at the time with uppercase letters except when it was part of the computer's name (upper case makes it a proper noun). As an acronym, I don't recall "PC" ever being used to describe the generic class of microcomputers.

    I don't know where you lived, but we used "PC" that way consistently. No one had a IBM PC in high school: our PCs were C64s, Amigas, Ataris, and the one lucky guy who could afford a Mac. We never needed a word for "IBM PC clone" as non of us had one.

    Maybe it's regional, like the whole "what kind of coke would you like" thing.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  129. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    Beautiful, isn't it? Without even looking at this I know that my company can undercut the bid by at least 65% and still come out OK.

  130. No, read TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only people that would have to suffer in such a waiting scenario are the maintenance staff that have to manually turn on the A/C...

    And yeah, replacement parts for that old 80's shit is easier to come by than stuff for a 25 year old HVAC system anyway.

  131. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by unimacs · · Score: 1

    Just like engine management systems, building management system have gotten quite a bit more complex over the years. We work with building automation system data when we are brought in to improve the energy efficiency and air quality of a building. I've written software that pulls data from these systems and analyzes it. We've done a number of schools. An automation system at a high school we are working with now tracks almost 1500 data points. The interactions within the systems now are much more involved. It's not just scheduled start up times.

    It's true though that you don't need a particularly high powered system to run the software. A library for at least one of the "standard" protocol stacks used to communicate with the devices has been ported to Raspberry Pi. However, the industry is moving toward adopting a java based system that individual controls manufacturers can customize.

    These systems have gotten sophisticated enough that they are beyond what a typical high school instructor and students could put together and adequately test. For example, as buildings have become better insulated, making sure that there is an adequate number of air changes is critically important. Do you really want a high school instructor and a bunch of students in charge of making sure the automation system does what it needs to do? Even if you got some rock star teacher, what if they leave? It seems to me to be a huge liability.

  132. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The later models of the C64 has the text "Personal Computer" written out under the "Commodore 64" text, the earlier didn't.

    There isn't a specific time for when all home computers were called it and when they weren't. It was more of a marketing choice that was different from month to month.

  133. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Informative

    You drone on about "history". Meanwhile, many of us LIVED through those years and yes indeed most of us non-kludge clone users would have viewed the branding of our chosen alternative as an INSULT.

    Commie users certainly would have viewed their machine being called a "PC" as an insult. PCs were a brand associated with IBM and later Microsoft. It represented the ultimate in crapulence unworthy success.

    I don't think DOS users in those days would have been happy to have their machines lumped in with Apples or Ataris either.

    The generic non-brand terms were "home computer" and "microcomputer".

    Some of us actually lived this shit and aren't just regurgitating bad wikipedia articles.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  134. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Y2K+is+bogus · · Score: 1

    It sounded to me like they were using APRS for the comms, which would match up nicely to the 155mhz business frequency the school uses. The problem is that they used the single allocated channel for both voice and data traffic.

    It sounds like the Amiga is part of a control system that was replaced in the 80's, I would imagine that they are replacing the control system once again, including actuators. $2mn isn't enough to replace all the HVAC stuff in 19 schools.

  135. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by JimSadler · · Score: 1, Informative

    The purchase of school AC systems is an arena in which organised crime seems to thrive. I have seen it first hand as a specialist employed for school AC systems. Units that use water towers are particularly suspect. In warmer states any boilers in a public school are highly suspect. For example I have seen a large twin boiler unit that was operated for 40 years that really did next to nothing yet it ran continuously. It only acted to feed a warming tray in the cafeteria and cost a ton of money every year. A simple electrical warmer that cost next to nothing could have easily done the job and since electric warmers warm quickly it could be turned on just before lunch and shut down after lunch. Those boilers probably cost well over one million to install and keep running. The reason why is someone powerful owned a company that got the installation contract. This stuff is continuous. If organized crime can get into county school that often have budgets over one billion per year and simply rake off 5% it can be perpetual and so expensive to investigate and prove that those who want to can't stop it from continuing.

  136. Not a C64. by TheBilgeRat · · Score: 2

    NOT a C64. Its an Amiga 2000.

    1. Re:Not a C64. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same difference

  137. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could buy a few spares now and have them ready to go just in case of a problem...

  138. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

    A bespoke system like this is difficult to modify or expand. It could also crap out at any time, leaving them to scramble for a replacement. It makes sense to replace it. It does not make sense to spend $2M to do so. They should track down the ex-student that wrote the original program, and pay him a few $k to port it to a new device. A Raspberry Pi would be a good choice.

    That's just a controller. That controller needs to talk to hardware, and 20 year old hardware may be getting quite crufty and in need of replacement or upgrading just to bring it to something we can interface with.

    And most of that cost is probably in the installation - you're not just replacing an Amiga, you're replacing the stuff the Amiga controls that talks to the air handling systems, all of which are probably located in weird, long dusty locations covered in 20 years of dust and dirt. At the same time, you probably have to upgrade the wiring as well, and that is probably a good chunk of the cost.

    Oh yeah, it probably has to be done in the summer as well, so your installers will be sweating it out installing replacement equipment.

    A few Pis, a few sensors, a few relay boards, cheap stuff. but all the installation work and replacement of wiring, etc, probably accounts for the vast majority of the money.

  139. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by BigFootApe · · Score: 1, Informative

    The alternative to using the term "PC" to describe IBM PCs and their descendants is to use some horribly convoluted terminology, along the lines of "Oh no, this isn't a Mac, this is a computer that implements standards comprising a descendant of the IBM PC architecture..

    IBM PC compatible or IBM PC clone is what your looking for.

  140. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by cnaumann · · Score: 1, Informative

    You cut $200 off your utility bill in a few weeks with a new thermostat...

    My conclusion is that you could not figure out how to turn in on an went without any sort of heat or AC for several weeks.

  141. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by RedWizzard · · Score: 2

    Commodore never used the PC acronym in its marketing or branding.

    Yes, they did. For their IBM PC clones, for the C128 in some markets, and for the Amiga. Your theory that "PC" referred exclusively to IBM PC compatibles is not true. It did eventually come to mean that, but in the 1980's it simply meant "personal computer".

  142. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by lgw · · Score: 1

    IIRC, the first Amiga had cooperative multitasking, but the kernel was written for preemptive multitasking, and following models had it. It was a big deal at the time, about 5 years before Linux made proper multitasking available to the masses.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  143. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thermostats do not have an efficiency. Your use of them does.

  144. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by istartedi · · Score: 1

    PC may or may not be the PC term for this PC and its PC boards.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  145. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by dwywit · · Score: 2
    --
    They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
  146. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Been there, done that. You're invisible if your stuff doesn't break. Nobody even knows your name. Tell someone what you did and they only see that you worked on outdated technology with no relevance to current systems.

  147. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The old analog thermostats often allow the temperature to vary too much. The homeowner sets the temperature higher to compensate, so it doesn't get extremely cold when the temperature hits a minimum.

  148. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Wain13001 · · Score: 2

    Had someone accidentally spill a glass bottle (the real ones, not the minis today) of sprite directly into the vents at the top of my C64 at a party while it was on.

    It was fine, they just kept playing the game they had loaded.

  149. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Woah. You saved $200 on heating costs in a few weeks? Just your savings represents about 2 months of heating costs for me, during the winter.

    Actually, they didn't specify it was heating costs. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't.

    What, exactly, was your old thermostat doing?

    Poorly setting the temperature, holding it too long on, or maybe even off, who knows without seeing it.

    Did you have to use cash money to light the pilot light?

    Pilot lights ARE cash money. That's why electronic ignitions are eventual savings for those with combustion heaters.

  150. Commodore had one of the first PCs... by JoeCommodore · · Score: 1

    Years before the IBM PC there was the Commodore PET Personal Computer http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi... even said so on the name badge.

    --
    "Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
  151. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by tomhath · · Score: 0

    GP is probably Al Gore incognito. Heating or cooling his mansion could easily use that much energy.

  152. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    eBay, there is a TON of that stuff out there... the prices are cheap as well...

    If you're in a position to place critical infrastructure in the hands of ebay then please quit your job, better still quit the industry.

  153. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How in the hell is a thermostat inefficient? Seriously? Sounds like you got sold a bill of goods and you bought it.

  154. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    Commie users certainly would have viewed their machine being called a "PC" as an insult.

    Well, I don't know about insulting, but at the time I would have considered it confusing. After all PCs were for boring things like spreadsheets or cooking recipe databases, my C64 is for rocking the video games man!

  155. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by KGIII · · Score: 1

    I never had the Amiga but this was their fault (and I share some accountability). I had, and still have, a working PET and a VIC-20 (with several extra power supply bricks) but never went to the Amiga. See, the Amiga was mostly marketed as a game system. It was compared with the Atari of the day. At this time I was now needing something bigger (I thought) and something more business specific. I had an Apple at home, there were some in the lab at school as well, but I decided to take the plunge and go with Trash 80s. Commodore went out of business not too long after and I suppose I made the right choice at the time.

    However, this is not really all that surprising, I mentioned that I still have a variety of working older computers. I keep them, some of them, setup in my basement. Old hardware is just as capable as it was when you purchased it. If your compute needs have not changed then they are still as suitable for the tasks they were originally used for.

    As an aside, it is a bit amusing to see the RISC chip design returning to/gaining popularity in the consumer market.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  156. I wish our system was that modern by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    We run and control several large machines at our plant from relay logic. Better still some of it controls emergency shutdown functionality. I see your 30 year old computer and will happily raise you our 45 year old relay based system.

    That said I'm not sure any of the relays are still 45 years old. We had a massive amount of reliability problems a good 10 years ago which saw most of the relays replaced due to tin whiskers

  157. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by AndroidCat · · Score: 2

    Replace it with a Raspberry Pi 2, running Amiga emulation. https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  158. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by dissy · · Score: 1

    I do IT at an electronics manufacturing plant - the HVAC uses a JACE BacNet controller that is on the network, so somehow I'm the one that has to deal with any/all HVAC messes (It does plug in the wall after all!)

    $2M for 20 buildings (rounding up) is $100k - which compared to multiple quotes for retrofit I've gotten over the past two years is a fucking STEAL!

    Hell it cost us that much to replace just three dual-compressor Ground Roof Top Units (don't ask, I didn't name them) on our existing system.

    Also we are not government, just industrial. None of the HVAC companies I use are government either.
    This isn't "pork" by any stretch, it's just how HVAC is.

    You can argue it shouldn't cost that much, just like I can argue Oracle software or Sun hardware probably shouldn't cost that much, but unless you live off eBay (or use a c64 and student labor to write code) it's just simply a fact.

  159. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    Yes, after you replaced the power supply.

    Heh, no doubt. Pro tip: A fan pointed at the power supply made them last a lot longer. We built a wooden housing with a wire mesh grill and took a fan out of an old oscilloscope, it worked great!

  160. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by anagama · · Score: 1

    You're right about "PC" as used in the past. The 80s were a time when there were a lot of choices for a home computer -- not just different brands that behaved identically (e.g. dell v. lenovo), but totally different visions about home computers: Atari, TRS-80 (I had a 16k CoCo), Commodore, Apple, IBM, TI-99/4A, Coleco Adam (my cousin had one of these), and I'm probably missing a dozen other manufacturers or more.

    These were all distinctive systems and back then, "PC" really did mean an IBM, and then later "PC Clone/Compatible" came into vogue for non-IBM computers that functioned like an IBM. Nobody called a C64 a "PC Clone" exactly because people expected "PC" to mean something that worked like an IBM PC.

    Today though, it seems the distinction has sort of faded away. IBM doesn't even make PCs anymore, even the clone market is highly consolidated, and the hardware is basically intercompatable no matter where you get it -- you can install Windows on your Apple if you want and people have been doing hackintoshes for quite a while (running OSX on non-Apple hardware). Somewhere along the way in all of this, PC seemed to become a rather generic term -- I can't pinpoint when -- maybe around the time Apple went Intel.

    It's a shame in a lot of ways that there is so little computer variety anymore -- maybe someday we'll suffer a "great computer famine" due to the intensive monocropping consumer computer gear has experienced.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  161. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Livius · · Score: 1

    So, you're saying it's a mainframe?

  162. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

    I bet it was the new thermostat that told you that. :)

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  163. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by codepigeon · · Score: 1

    We didn't have airconditioning in my schools growing up (midwest). We seemed to have survived...

  164. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by ScienceofSpock · · Score: 1

    my C64 is for rocking the video games man!

    Time for some Commando!

  165. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

    Yes. The Amiga ran on a 68000. The 68000 didn't support instruction restart. So you couldn't properly do preemptive multitasking with it. It needed the applications to cooperate with the interruptions. So an application could undermine the preemption.

    I don't suppose you could provide some documentation on that?

    Because there was ABSOLUTELY NOTHING in any of the various generations of Developer Guides or AmigaNews bulletins I have about kludging apps for co-operative multi-tasking, and I was one of the people who taught people how to use pre-emptive multi-tasking on the Amiga. I used the same design methods that had worked for me on multi-processing IBM mainframes and lived to tell the tale.

    I cannot recall offhand any MC68000 instructions that in fact could be broken by interrupts the way a System/370 MVCL instruction could be (had it itself not supported interruptions). I do believe that there were spin-lock instructions in the MC68000 instruction set, though. So if you could mention a few, I'd appreciate it.

    There were certainly OS resources that ran interrupt-disabled, but no more so than IBM's OS/MVS or Linux. And the Amiga supported the ability of higher-priority interrupts to kick in while lower-priority interrupt services were executing, which is something that I'm not sure the IBM hardware could handle until about the time the PCI bus took over. And certainly the IBM/Microsoft OS's weren't up to the task until quite late in the century.

    The Amiga's various co-processors did perform instructions sufficiently complex that interruptability would be an issue, but they were essentially co-processors assigned and scheduled as resources, not task-switching units in their own right.

  166. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by ogdenk · · Score: 3, Informative

    Then you must have lived on Mars or something.

    As someone who attended Atari user's group meetings as a kid, I can tell you first-hand that people got pretty annoyed and quickly corrected you if you referred to our machines as PC's. PC's were expensive boring turds that none of us wanted. Personal computer was acceptable. PC referred to IBM crap or a clone later on.

  167. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my god who the hell cares?

    http://www.reactionface.net/im...

  168. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  169. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    i'm abusing my hp48 pretty much daily since 1997 and it hasn't shown signs of aging, let alone failure. Even the buttons are still as tactile as the day i bought it. Took me through high school, university, post-grad and beyond.

    I have no other device, outside of my body (if we extend "device" to biological organs), that have endured so much and not even changed appearance. Even my swiss army knife has failed and needs replacement.

    They say that after some abuse the ATTN button (if you say ON button imma bash you over the head with the 48) doesn't work right and you have to fiddle with it, but so far so good.

  170. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 1

    the new unit had pretty much paid for itself within a few weeks

    Woah. You saved $200 on heating costs in a few weeks? Just your savings represents about 2 months of heating costs for me, during the winter. What, exactly, was your old thermostat doing? Did you have to use cash money to light the pilot light?

    In this case, it was A/C. Like I said, the house was old: it had a very old, inefficient central A/C unit at the time (which we also replaced, once we could afford to.) It wasn't a big house, but it was a drafty house, so it didn't exactly hold its temperature all that well.

    So instead of having a house that basically always kept itself cool (I'm somewhat forgetful and distracted, especially first thing in the morning; my wife and I rarely thought/remembered to crank the temp when leaving for the day), the new thermostat always remembered to turn off for half the day--and the hottest half, at that. The fact that it was a stupid-hot, stupid-humid Maryland summer counted for something, too.

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  171. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by ArcadeMan · · Score: 1

    Coleco Adam (my cousin had one of these)

    Ask him if he still has it. It's probably worth enough to list on eBay.

  172. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 1

    GP is probably Al Gore incognito. Heating or cooling his mansion could easily use that much energy.

    Bwahahaha! Oh, man, that's fresh.

    Al Gore. Heh.

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  173. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Nonsense, you could buy 20 spares of everything for cheap and have spare parts for years...

    I didn't say "wait until it breaks, then go and find spares", I said you could get spares today, cheap.

    So do so...

  174. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 1

    You cut $200 off your utility bill in a few weeks with a new thermostat...

    My conclusion is that you could not figure out how to turn in on an went without any sort of heat or AC for several weeks.

    Haha, yes! I am that stupid! No wonder I was sweating buckets and passing out all summer!

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  175. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 0

    And why do you need "something like that" in the first place? I seem to remember going to school with radiator heaters and opening the windows in the summer.

  176. Cost savings by jisom · · Score: 1

    I see a lot of people seemingly missing the bigger issues.

    1. Savings over time with a new HVAC system
    The HVAC system in place has obviously been in use for 30+ years. In that time a lot of efficiency in these systems has occurred. In 5 years the school district will probably recouped a significant portion of that in energy savings.

    2. Just replacing parts may work, but doesn't change the fact that the whole HVAC system is 30+ years old.
    You can't expect to just replace one boiler out of say 2 or 3 and expect the other(s) to last another 30 years till they consider doing the whole system.

    3. Control system that it will be replaced with probably not much more powerful than a Raspberry Pi.
    Most of the cost is probably the AC and heating units and LABOR. The control part are probably the least of the costs.

    FWIW. It is really bad that we have to have the Governments of the world to tell manufacturers to improve their products efficiency. Mostly I think of autos, but there probably are alot of things (Energy Star?) that have improved because of the governments rather than bringing the best product to market in the first place.

  177. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    \o/ fellow HP48 user :-)

    Sadly one of my HP48SX on button doesn't respond 99% of the time :-( ... Makes it a bitch to turn on or off. These days I just use an emulator for the HP48GX so I don't have to worry about changing batteries.

  178. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Amiga was essentially the first microcomputer that really caught the imagination of computer professionals who were used to working with and programming on advanced operating systems daily. Certainly Mac caught on with the design crowd too, even though under the hood it was pretty basic. Everything else in the micro world really seemed derived from the CP/M style of systems, where the "operating system" was nothing more than a glorified boot loader and monitor system.

  179. Sounds extremely vulnerable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The guy in the video says that the system shares the same signal as the communication radios, I'm guessing with the right equipment you can spoof the signals and control the HVAC systems for the school. Yikes!!

  180. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ScentCone · · Score: 1
    I didn't say you mentioned efficiency. What you did say was:

    And yet a high-school student from the 1980's was able to engineer a system with off the shelf computers and a little ingenuity. And managed to build a system that has lasted for 25 years.

    Which sounds like praise. But you don't know if you're praising something that was actually a long-term financial disaster, or merely serviceable, or what.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  181. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is why government is almost never an answer.

  182. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

    We didn't have AC, either. But we didn't have schools designed for AC. Our classrooms had windows that could be opened.

  183. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As usual, your shitty posting history is confirmed by yet another piece of shit post. The 68010 had nothing to do with "instruction restart". Jesus Christ.

  184. "Commodore PC"? Really? by LocalH · · Score: 3, Informative

    Couldn't take the three additional characters to write "Commodore Amiga"?

    Yes, I know, the Amiga is technically a "PC", but since Commodore did actually release a line of PC clones that were actually branded "Commodore PC", I consider the headline inaccurate.

    --
    FC Closer
  185. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

    The problem really is one of local patronage. The school district builds a huge new school, one that is actually a palace of learning. No expenses are spared.

    Who gets the contract to supply the materials and build the thing? Somebody with a lot of pull at the local School Board.

  186. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Daniel+Klugh · · Score: 1

    Wasn't the full title of the original Atari 800 "Atari Home Computer System"? Just like the game system was called the "Video Computer System".
    ("video" being code for "video game" back then)

    --
    Daniel Klugh
  187. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Duhavid · · Score: 4, Funny

    Did the sprites render faster after that?

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  188. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    Whoa, talk about a trip down memory lane. I haven't seen that Deluxe Paint picture of King Tut in ages. Great find !

  189. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +1, Snark.

  190. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a while I had a decent library of Commodore 64 games, but I could only keep a machine for a few months to a year before it started malfunctioning from overheating after two minutes of use. It got to where I was scouring garage sales up and down just to stay stocked in computers.

  191. Over priced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I could replace that system with a $3 micro-controller (maybe a mux, with some D flip flops) and a few relays (solid state if they want fast switching that will last for years), and a few cheap thermistors (a few for each zone), plus the usual set of regulator, resistors, capacitors and maybe an inductor and a crystal clock if you want real time accuracy, and opto-isolators if you want to isolate your IC's from the rest of the circuit. Costing less than $100, possibly less than $25. The programming should be easy to port over. The most expensive part may be the actual AC units themselves, but those should only cost a few thousand per unit. All all together the actual cost of the system should be in the range of under $100k per school.

    The hardest part would be calculating the logarithmic curve for the thermistors but that should be in the data sheet. Allowing for highly accurate per room temp controls.

    1. Re:Over priced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've never built anything in your life.

  192. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    To be more correct, the 68000 certainly could support multitasking, both cooperative and preemptive -- it just could not fully support instruction restart after certain types of exceptions ( and this could not support virtual memory ala UNIX).

    An early Sun (or Apollo?) workstation worked around this by running two 68000 CPUs with the same stream at all times, one slightly ahead of the other, to allow one to have state the main one required on order to properly recover. I dont' t have the reference handy but google it if you're curious.

  193. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Linux_Bastard · · Score: 1

    Been there, can't fit the T-shirt anymore, but this comment is pretty close to the word on the street Circa '85.

    Not so sure about the commies though. I did meet and become friends with a fellow who was Russian, who was was on a team reverse engineering the ZX Spectrum in the 80's though.

    Personally I was"rocking" a PDP-11 and DSM (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MUMPS)

    --
    F X=0:1:9999 F D=2:1 Q:((X>2)&(X#D=0)!((D>X/2)&(X'=1))) I D>(X/2) W:$X>75 ! W X,?$X+5-$l(X) Q
  194. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

    In my opinion, what's being missed is the opportunity to have a "teachable moment."

    30 years ago, some kid wrote this. I'll bet you could find a few kids at each school who would be interested in this from the software side. So figure out and install the hardware, sure, but how about having a contest to come up with the software? Let any school that is interested come up with software to handle it. Let professionals QA the software to make sure it works. Anything that doesn't work loses. If they all lose, send it all back with a list of found bugs and let everybody try again. Establish appropriate criteria in the event that there's more than one that does the job correctly.

    The school might save a little money, but they've actually educated some kids in the process. Sounds win-win to me,

  195. Boot from RAM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I seem to recall a standard practice was to copy the boot disk to the RAM disk: then reboot from the RAM disk for faster performance and to free up the floppy drive for other things.

    Those RAM disks could survive being switched off for quite a while (sometimes 30s) before losing data. Security? Hah. I remember writing an application for helping with a BBS game (Perihelion it was called, written by an Ottawa local). It walked the global screen list to find the BBS program (screens were kind of a cross between MDI container windows and virtual desktops, except each had its own palette and resolution and they could overlap). I then injected my own window into the BBS program's window list (on its screen) so I could use it as a player to help build a map of local space.

  196. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

    As I remember it, it was an Apollo workstation that used that method.

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  197. That price is pretty decent by Malenx · · Score: 1

    They've probably already burned at least one million $ in efficiency losses over the past ten years just by staying with the current system. Regardless however, I have a lot of respect for his programmer and the maintenance staff that's helped keep it running as long as it has.

  198. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by jblues · · Score: 1

    History proves you wrong.

    Back then people would argue about whether PC meant IBM derivative or personal computer, in general. And they still do today.

    --
    If it acquires resources on instantiation like a duck, then its a shared_ptr<Duck>
  199. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Daniel+Klugh · · Score: 1

    Bouncing a ball while formatting a disk? Hell, we could do that on a Atari 800 back in 1979! And, from what I know about the Commodore 64, you can do it there too. And the TI-99/4A could probably do it too; what with it having a graphic co-processor that could efectively (albeit slowly) act as a CPU.

    --
    Daniel Klugh
  200. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

    Not really. If I had to guess, the C64 turns things off and on. A modern system optimizes energy performance, is variable volume or variable temperature, monitors CO2 levels to increase outside air when needed, etc. While BMS controls are overpriced relative to comparable consumer devices, $2MM would be around $500/point for a typical school.

    Keep in mind the numbers likely include new sensors, actuators, and all that fun stuff...

  201. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by TheDarkener · · Score: 2

    "Yeah, you're just going to have to sit in the sweltering heat during summer school until ThunderfuckThor69 sends us the PSU we need for a 30 year old computer made by a company very few of you have ever heard of."

    Uhm, or if the administration has a half a brain between all of them, they order a set (or two, or three) of replacement parts BEFORE they fail.

    I have 3 replacement Palm Tungsten Cs sitting, waiting for my primary to die. I'm not stupid enough to wait for something I rely on so heavily, that's THAT old, without having backups sitting around.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  202. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Jeremi · · Score: 2

    Been there, done that. You're invisible if your stuff doesn't break. Nobody even knows your name. Tell someone what you did and they only see that you worked on outdated technology with no relevance to current systems.

    This is why it's so critical to include scheduled malfunctions in your control logic. That way you'll get called in every 6-9 months to "fix" the system, which you'll be able to do very quickly since it is just a matter of resetting the timer for next time. You'll make a few hundred dollars each time, and everybody will recall you fondly as the indispensable genius who is the only person who knows just how to keep the system running. Just be sure to randomize the timeouts a bit so that nobody catches on ;^)

    (disclaimer: I'm joking; I don't really advocate doing this)

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  203. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Pauldow · · Score: 1

    Does it have any security software so the Chinese can't control things?

  204. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 1
    FTA:

    It replaced a computer that was "about the size of a refrigerator.

    I'm sure the Amiga isn't as efficient as newer tech. It probably can't control zones as well or as accurately as a current commercial system either. But It's probably a far sight more efficient for it's own power consumption than the "refrigerator" sized system it replaced. I'm sure it was a hell of a lot cheaper to purchase at the time it went online, and to maintain over the last 25 years.

    If it performed it's function at least as well as the system it replaced, then no, it probably wasn't a financial disaster.

  205. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Jeremi · · Score: 1

    Beautiful, isn't it? Without even looking at this I know that my company can undercut the bid by at least 65% and still come out OK.

    It's good that you're confident in your company's abilities; but in order to win the contract, you'd have to gain the confidence of the decision-makers in the school district as well. As any company involved in outsourcing over the last decade can tell you, a cheaper up-front quote is no bargain if the delivered product is screwed up.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  206. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    I won't argue with anything you are saying, I am talking about realities and the realities are that costs in the USA are completely out of bounds of reason and I have proven it already enough times with my clients that I can make bold statements like that and again, still come out on top.

  207. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    "Yeah, you're just going to have to sit in the sweltering heat during summer school until ThunderfuckThor69 sends us the PSU we need for a 30 year old computer made by a company very few of you have ever heard of."

    Y'know, sane people make sure they have rare spare parts on hand before the system breaks. Then you repair with the on-hand parts while ordering a new set of spares.

    Which is not meant to imply that that's what's being done in this case. No clue about that. But the right thing to do is have the spares on hand, unless they're the kind of spares that you can find in any hardware store in town....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  208. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm NOT joking; I do this.

  209. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by jopsen · · Score: 1

    So less than 2 dozen schools need to spend upwards of $2 million dollars to... control the HVAC?

    Really?

    That is the bigger issue, IMHO...

    I didn't care to read the article... but they are probably replacing the A/Cs with new units etc...

  210. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

    Why do we need toilets and electricity? People managed thousands of years without them.

    --
    This space intentionally left blank
  211. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    You're absolutely full of fail today.

    Things have a shelf life, old electronics especially so. I would put no more faith in a 20 year old replacement part as the part that just died in service. It's the whole reason we have the concepts of "hot-spares"

  212. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So? You can still find plenty of Ford Model T's that you can hand crank and start to this day. Doesn't mean it they are more efficient, comfortable, or more reliable.

  213. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The kid didn't build the Amiga, or its systems, and who knows when the other system was built, or what it used.

    Maybe it had one of those ginormous HDDs that weighed over a hundred pounds.

    So yay for technology matching on, but as the above says, you may be lavishing praise on something that isn't doing as great a job as could be done.

  214. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  215. PC is an old term anyway... by Kenshin · · Score: 1

    Meh. We don't even call them PCs anymore. They're desktops or laptops, Mac or Windows.

    --

    Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    1. Re:PC is an old term anyway... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That's true, 'PC' is kind of a derogatory term used by Mac fans

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  216. PDP-11 ftw. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    An old commodore running an HVAC, that's cute. Doesn't hold a candle to the PDP's still running nuclear plants. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/06/19/nuke_plants_to_keep_pdp11_until_2050/

  217. slander by dltaylor · · Score: 1

    To call an Amiga by the TRADEMARKED name "PC" is slander.

    Until circa 2000, PCs were braindead compared to even a basic 68000-based Amiga, and not even close to the 68030/68040 versions.

    The OS has real-time hooks for interrupt and scheduler management, which are still not common features, plus both lightweight and full processes.

    1. Re:slander by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Until circa 2000, PCs were braindead compared to even a basic 68000-based Amiga, and not even close to the 68030/68040 versions.

      I had a 486 PC in 1995 that ran rings around any Amiga ever made. I loved the Amiga, but sadly, Commodore let it shrivel on the vine...

  218. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's why electronic ignitions are eventual savings for those with combustion heaters.

    Until the power goes

    For a week

    In the middle of winter

    Due to an ice storm

  219. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Until the power goes

    For a week

    In the middle of winter

    Due to an ice storm

    Oh goodness, you're right, an ice storm that may occasionally knock out power is a good reason to waste money year round on a pilot light that burns regardless.

    No wait, you're not saved then, because even with that kind of pilot, you can still be out of luck with a furnace as it won't run the rest of the controls and sensors ANYWAY. You'd have to have something positively ancient or specially designed to run without any electric power.

    Look, you're worried about your power going out? Invest in a backup for that then. Maybe it'll be worth it for you, maybe not.

    But a standing pilot? Money being burned. Don't pretend otherwise.

  220. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm curious. What do you think "begs the question" means? Have you ever looked it up? Just kidding, clearly you haven't. You should do it soon - definitely before you ever use the expression again to avoid further embarrassment.

  221. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unless you static-zap the joystick or user port. Or the VIC-II craps out, or the PLA dies. Or the brick power supply puts WAY too much juice through the breadbox. It happens.

  222. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article you linked to says " "to beg the question" sometimes also means "to raise the question" ". So the difference is still not clear to me

  223. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why bother?

  224. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 1

    The Amiga was (and is) NOT a PC!

    Enjoy.

    http://www.bytecellar.com/wp-c...

  225. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by lgw · · Score: 1

    And did you live where people drink soda, coke, or pop?

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  226. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by sjames · · Score: 4, Funny

    When I was in school, our A/C was regulated by an electric tea kettle, that we placed underneath the thermostat in order to trick it into keeping the room at a temperature below "Shake 'n Bake"

  227. Steel mill in the 1990s - may still have them by dbIII · · Score: 1

    A steel rod rolling mill I worked at in the early 1990s had Amigas displaying details of what was going on at each point in the line. The graphics was line drawings that looked very much like "Hitchhikers Guide" style. They were along the line and in the finishing area so a very hot and dusty environment with sealed plastic covers over industrial keyboards and sealed monitors.
    That was the monitoring system, the control system was something else and a bit older.

  228. This news story made me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL. Truely... it's rare. Fok em and there 2 million dollar replacement LOL. Student boy ! LOL... give him the 2 million LOL.

  229. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

    Atari made a point of doing "everything the Amiga could do". It was mainly because Jack Tramiel of Atari held a grudge against his former company (Commodore).

    But the Atari computers didn't have the graphics co-processors or heavyweight DMA capabilities that the Amiga did. So they did what the Amiga did, but they had to make the CPU do all the work instead of being able to dump bit-blits and the like off onto the secondary processors.

    The C64 and TI computers had hardware sprites, but not full bit-blit, and I don't think that either of them had the ability to do the framebuffer-hopping that allowed you to smoothly pull one display down over another while animation was in full swing.

    We really didn't see that outside the Amiga until PCI bus graphics cards started loading up on processors. And even then, I saw pictures "tear" when they scrolled for years.

  230. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Home computer. All of those models were called "home computers".

  231. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

    This is a serious deployment controlling a whole lot of non-trivial hardware. More importantly it's pivotal to the operation of the school itself.

    The PI is the prototype. Of course you don't rapid prototype until you figure out what you need.

    OSEK is a standards body that has produced specifications for an embedded operating system, a communications stack, and a network management protocol for automotive embedded systems. Nothing about this should cost $2M. You could easily build an OSEK compliant car with an open source software (GPL3) They're finally getting open source PLCs

    There is no reason HVAC should cost what it does. The only reason it does cost that much is because each company is closed source and has separate networking protocols.

    In addition to being cheaper in 40 years when they decide to replace it no one will wonder where the guy was that programmed it or if the company that built it is still in business. They'll have the full drawings and source to the project.

  232. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have lots of no-longer manufactured equipment at the factory where I work. Guess what we do? we have spares.

    You can buy a dozen Commodores for $5000.

    Why not just have a pile of replacements sitting there in shrinkwrap bags (with dessicators) until they are needed? This is exactly what we do here. Also Amigas are really easy to fix. The core chips basically never fail, and there are basically no SMT parts, so replacing components on the PCB is trivial. We don't use Commodores, but we have plenty of old expensive boards that fail in CNC machines and thermal processing equipment. When it fails we swap it out for a spare part, and we give the failed board to a technician to diagnose and repair.

    This is just another example of stupid government largesse and corruption.

  233. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you don't have first hand experience with toilets and electricity yourself, but they are actually useful. HVAC in school? Not so much.

  234. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am an HVAC specialist. There is a whole lot of pork, but the pork is not in the government or the contract, it's just that HVAC companies are pretty much all complete rip-offs.

    A 1WB thermometer is $2, they'll put it in a fancy box and sell it to you for $100.

    So while the cost for this HVAC contract isn't outrageous, the price of HVAC systems in general is, because people are too ignorant to know the whole HVAC industry is a scam (well, ok, only the computer control part of the industry).

    This is no different to industrial PLCs, professional AV equipment, Telco equipment or any other specialty product: If you know anything about it, you'd be insane to shell your money out to any of these companies, but the customers of these companies couldn't care less.

  235. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Especially on the C64, because the 1541 drive had it's own CPU/RAM/ROM and the format routine was all done by the drive itself. Once the command was issued to it, the computer could go back to doing whatever it wanted. All you'd need to do is go back and check on the status later when the format was done to see if an error was encountered.

  236. Seems like it would be easier... by lord_mike · · Score: 1

    ....to just run the software on an Amiga emulator and make some sort of adapter for whatever hardware ports they are using. It sure would cost less than $2 million.

  237. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Spoken like someone who doesn't really know what goes on in "real world industry", and spouts textbook dogma to others.

  238. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That's not strictly true. Just multitasking could run from a regular timer IRQ which surely did save all the needed CPU state to context switch and restart from where you left off. (Otherwise, *single* tasking wouldn't work...)

    What you *couldn't* do was virtual memory properly, because lacking any built-in support for an MMU, even if you added external independent MMU hardware when it signalled a bus fault in the middle of a complex instruction, the instruction could be neither rewound nor restarted from the middle.

    The kicker there is things like the multi-register save/load (MOVEM) instructions - for things like IRQ you can just wait till they're over before taking the interrupt, but for bus error used for VM faults you really have to stop immediately, and only the 68010 pushed enough info onto the stack to allow RTE at the end of the fault handler to continue from the middle of an instruction.

  239. Money well wasted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it ain't broke... Let's spend millions replacing this one thing that works perfectly well and has worked without flaw or repair for almost 40 years!

  240. Money well wasted by GreyGuy3344 · · Score: 1

    If it ain't broke... Let's spend millions replacing this one thing that works perfectly well and has worked without flaw or repair for almost 30 years!

  241. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Greyfox · · Score: 2

    Our HVAC ducts were lined with safe, fireproof asbestos.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  242. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by jddj · · Score: 1

    Commodore made the Colt (I think) PC (as in "IBM Compatible PC") during the same era as the Amiga 2000, so it's valid to question what's being talked about here, IMO.

  243. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This. It's not like AC is so essentially that an outage will be a major disaster, so... why not just let the thing run till it dies? Put aside some money for it in future, but this thing could keep ticking over for decades, so why not just let it?

    Also still boggling that a project that could easily be done by some kids with a pi for a few thousand tops needs $2M. This stuff aint rocket science (and yes, I did work in building control systems for a while... it's messy, the protocols are a bit old and crufty if you need to delve, and there's the occasional bit of hardware work here and there, but it really isn't that hard).

  244. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by RJFerret · · Score: 1

    Actually the other main processor, the Fat Agnus, ran on alternate clock cycles from the 68k. That's why it had a 28 Mhz clock crystal for a 7 Mhz processor from my understanding.

    I do not know which timing the gate array (Gary), video chip (Denise), or sound (Paula) were on however.

  245. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So I accidentally made this stuff that is good insulation but the dust somehow instigates cancer without even causing mutations. How do we market it?

    Does it burn?

  246. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

    Yes. These things bubbled up slowly from my subconscious since earlier today. Years of crypto has ruined my CPU architecture skills.
     

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  247. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by n3r0.m4dski11z · · Score: 1

    Do you think he also did all the HVAC control work? crawling through the 19 schools ceilings, installing sensors, calibrating equipment?

    Or do you think they asked the only kid who knew anything about these new fangled computers to read the manual and "programme" the system.

    There are a million assumptions that people are making in the comments. I can control my buildings HVAC and security from my desk. Does that mean it was free to get it to that point? Everyone is focusing on the kid who works with the system. BFD, any facilities maintenance worker can programme an BACnet type system to the degree they wish to learn about it!

    --
    -
  248. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While working in system control (since thankfully escaped) I saw numerous counter-examples to this (mostly at universities and such).

    Places that had perfectly functional lighting/AC systems that they desperately "needed" to replace with the latest bleeding edge tech - silly stuff like touch screens; web interfaces for control of lights, temperature, projectors, curtains etc; and other miscellaneous custom work.

    I cannot recall a *single* *case* where the new system was more reliable than the original. Which was great for us - the company made a good fraction of its revenue from maintenance - but it gave me a healthy desire to never have anything more complex than the bare minimum in any house I live in.

    They might have saved money on heating/cooling, but they lost on maintenance.

  249. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We had the opposite problem in our old office at uni years ago. We had a miniature cooler/fan thing pointed at the thermostat most of the time to keep the temperature above arctic.

  250. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by RJFerret · · Score: 1

    I didn't view my A500 being called a PC an insult, why would I? It was a personal computer far ahead of the Apple PCs (Macs didn't exist yet), IBM personal computers and a bit more advanced than Atari personal computers.

    I didn't view my A2000 being called a PC an insult, nor my A4000, why would I? It was a personal computer that ran Amiga software, Mac software and MS-DOS software all on the same hardware, and at speeds faster than actual Macs ironically.

    I don't view my current "Amiga" installation being called a PC an insult, I think it's pretty cool to still be using software productively in my daily life under emulation. I always wanted a portable Amiga, and for the past decade I've had and used one.

    It was pretty hard to insult such a device, that performed in every aspect better than the more expensive alternatives. The only thing it lacked was effective marketing in the States, but it was the predominant player overseas.

    I never heard anyone use your term "home computer" and it wasn't mentioned in computer classes that came into being later that I saw. Personal computers, microcomputers and mainframes were, dumb terminals too of course.

  251. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    I'll contract to do it for them tomorrow for $750,000. Such deal.

    They can fly me out and I'll spend a week examining all the specs I need to examine in person. Delivery: 6 months.

    I mean, Holy Crap, people. If an Amiga can do it, $2 million is clearly ridiculous.

    Oops... I mean... "Eh, MAYBE I could come down that far."

  252. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    The article you linked to says " "to beg the question" sometimes also means "to raise the question" ". So the difference is still not clear to me

    Simple rule of thumb: If you see the phrase in writing, it is almost always used incorrectly, to mean raise the question. If someone is refering to circular reasoning, they will usually just say "circular reasoning" or "assuming the conclusion".

    In your own writing, you should just avoid the phrase entirely. You will look either ignorant or pretentious. There are better phrases to use for any meaning of "begs the question".

  253. Arduino and a new student project? by peterofoz · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking its time for a new robotics project at school to build an Arduino controller for it. Cost maybe $100, a world of education experience, and most likely uses less power than the Commodore so the school will save money. Spend the $2 million on the students for lab resources and materials.

  254. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't view my A500 being called a PC an insult, why would I? It was a personal computer far ahead of the Apple PCs (Macs didn't exist yet)

    *Ahem*

    Macintosh: January 1984
    Amiga: July 1985
    A500: October 1987

  255. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you explain how a thermostat change in a house saved $200 (10x$20) in under 21 days ("within a few weeks")??? If the new stat saved you 50%, you would need to be spending ~$600/month with the old stat. Possible ...

    I have the old school thermostat and it would take two Chicago winter months to rack up that bill ($100/month is my heating budget) in a house 100 years with the drafts and crappy insulation and floors cool air rushed thru.

    So I'm curious as to how you save that much with a programmable thermostat unless you weren't using things like the off switch or the temperature dial (with our without setbacks).

    My favorite HVAC upgrade is an on-off light-style switch above my bed. So I'm sitting in bed, 75% asleep, and I can turn the system on or off. This feat accomplished with unneeded phone wire and an extra light switch. I'd like a smart one someday, but I haven't seen one with the intelligence I'd like (e.g., fire up the heat just enough to keep the pipes from bursting).

    Seriously, best thing ever. An on-off switch. Up ... ON! Down ... off. No buttons to press or cellphone to manipulate or buttons where you have to look at the LCD screen to see if your toggle took or toggled in the manner you thought it did. Yes, the thermostat is still set so I can't bake myself.

  256. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ThunderfuckThor69 · · Score: 1

    "Yeah, you're just going to have to sit in the sweltering heat during summer school until ThunderfuckThor69 sends us the PSU we need for a 30 year old computer made by a company very few of you have ever heard of."

    Yeah, that'd go over well with me as a kid. Or my parents.

    Thank god my wife always understood my posession to store old power supplies into our garage.

  257. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    What if something goes horribly wrong with the system and causes damage to the building? May not be Jeff's fault, but Jeff may be involved in the legal fallout.

    Also, what happens if Jeff gets hit by a bus tomorrow? Who will maintain it then?

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  258. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you explain how a thermostat change in a house saved $200 (10x$20) in under 21 days ("within a few weeks")???

    No, he can't. Any other questions?

  259. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Students do complicated things all the time. Doesn't meant that the individual bits can't be simple.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  260. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by MountainMan101 · · Score: 1

    I disagree with your interpretation of the advert. It's not that Apple were saying they don't make a PC, it's that there are PCs and there are Macs.

    A bit like saying do you want a phone or an iPhone, do you want a fizzy drink or a Coke.

    It's demonstrating their brand as above the average.

  261. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Honestly, the control part is fucking simple. It's not so simple to have something controlling 30-year-old systems that still running on a 30-year-old system, but the actual job it's doing is pretty minimal.

    That all depends on how fancy you want to be. When I say 'complicated', I should really have specified 'compared to your average house'. My parent's house has a single thermostat device to control the heating and AC. Mine has two - but doesn't have AC. It's two heating zones.

    I figure the 'update' includes replacing the sensors with more capable ones - going from ones that report only that they're requesting heating or cooling, to ones that actually report the temperature, along with other changes.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  262. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You saved $200 in a few weeks on heating and cooling?

    So You saved like $400 per month with a new thermostat?

    What is Your heating and cooling bill per month?

  263. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Nyder · · Score: 1

    You drone on about "history". Meanwhile, many of us LIVED through those years and yes indeed most of us non-kludge clone users would have viewed the branding of our chosen alternative as an INSULT.

    Commie users certainly would have viewed their machine being called a "PC" as an insult. PCs were a brand associated with IBM and later Microsoft. It represented the ultimate in crapulence unworthy success.

    I don't think DOS users in those days would have been happy to have their machines lumped in with Apples or Ataris either.

    The generic non-brand terms were "home computer" and "microcomputer".

    Some of us actually lived this shit and aren't just regurgitating bad wikipedia articles.

    Yes, I also lived the era. Here's the deal, PC has always meant Personal Computer. Very few computers actually used 'PC' in their name, because that is generally all those companies produced, computers for personal use. When IBM came along with their IBM PC, it was to disguise that they weren't referring to one of their servers, or big business machines they sold. IBM PC meant it was a computer for personal use.

    And that being said, everyone I knew in Seattle and online called IBM PC "compatables". That was because hardly anyone actually own an IBM, but they owned an IBM "Compatible" computer. We also referred to these computers as "Dos" machines, since that was the OS we used to play games on it.

    So while people do mistakenly think PC means x86 instruction set compatible computer, the truth of the matter is, that was wrong. We knew it at the time, we didn't care. But now later in life, it's doing an injustice to the old machines because people think the PC started with MS in the 1990's.

    my 2 cents.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  264. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? Really?

    You need it because it's fiscally irresponsible for your buildings to hemmorage energy. It's a piss poor example for the kids, too.

    I worked in a district that renovated a few 60-100 year old buildings because "the community" couldn't stand to lose them. Terrible idea. In winter, you could feel a breeze through the wallsas heat escaped. I can only imagine what the HVAC did to compensate...

  265. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by gfxguy · · Score: 1

    I'm betting it includes the entire HVAC system, not just the computers controlling it. 20 years is ancient for heating/AC, it's probably terribly inefficient.

    --
    Stupid sexy Flanders.
  266. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 1

    Raspberry PI, emulator software for the Amiga. One student to write thelayer between the software and the hardware.

  267. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Dekonega · · Score: 1

    You're wrong. It's perfectly fine to use "PC" to describe "Commodore Amiga". I've lived through the personal computer revolution and PC doesn't exclusively refer to "IBM PC". I have an Amiga and it's a PC. However it is not "IBM PC". Those machines were for spreadsheet suckers.

    Devices other than "IBM PCs" were marketed as PCs. For example Commodore 64c has a sticker on top of it and bottom which says that it's a "Personal Computer" aka. PC. And ads frequently referred it being a personal computer for the whole family. Furthermore HP sold a highly programmable calculator that was marketed as a PC before the PC revolution even started.

    Term "PC" was in use in e.g. marketing of various microcomputers well before IBM PC Model 5051 was introduced. I believe that some of the first "modern desktop computers" to be described as "PC" are from early 1970's. Any device which, to quote Wikipedia, "is a general-purpose computer whose size, capabilities and original sale price make it useful for individuals, and is intended to be operated directly by an end-user with no intervening computer operator" can be and should be described as a "PC".

    Here in Europe people often did refer various devices as PCs even if they were not from IBM. People also used to call their systems "microcomputers", "home computers" or by the name of the machine e.g. "Commodore" or "Atari" or "IBM Compatible" (because the software sold had stickers like "for IBM PC and 100% compatibles").

    Around 1999 this practice died since there were no other PCs than IBM PC clones at the PC market marketed for the general public. IBM PC, like Rollerblades (with roller skates), have become so synonymous with PC, that when people talk about PCs they tend to refer to IBM PC (clones) running Microsoft Windows. Furthermore Apple's marketing has taken advantage of the whole "Generic Trademark" thing and established themselves as "Mac" even though they're exactly same hardware.

    I need more beer. I cannot read these threads otherwise.

  268. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Its what used to be known as "The IBM way"....

    Admittedly not in the sense of randomised failure events, but certainly in the upgrade path. In the old days of punch card machinery, IBM would lease kit at various price/performance levels. An entry level system would be pretty slow. Eventually the need for faster throughput would become evident, and the friendly suit would advise a "field upgrade" ro the next performance level.

    Given the go-ahead the IBM engineer would arrive, shoo everyone out of the machinery room, remove the covers of the tabulator, sorter, whatever and move the drive belt from the small diameter pulley to the next one up. He might also dust around with a lint brush, oil a few bearings. He'd then replace the covers, settle down and update his paperwork/read his newspaper until the time allocated for the upgrade had passed. Tah-Dahhhh!!!!

    Of course, that might be all urban myth. :-)

  269. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    Amiga hardware is anything but cheap these days, at least the higher end 2000/3000/4000 models. Most of them also suffer from a few known problems (leaking clock batteries, blown capacitors). I still have a couple of amigas in the garage, and they would fetch more on the used market than any of the much newer hardware i have.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  270. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    The only difference here is that the critical infrastructure is custom designed...
    There are MANY cases where a piece of ageing critical infrastructure is actually a black box purchased from a vendor who are long since out of business, which is actually a much worse situation than these guys are in.

    The Amiga may be a proprietary system, but it's also one that is well understood and has been well documented over the years. Several people who worked on development of the Amiga hardware are still active online (e.g. Dave Haynie). The custom control system sitting on top of it belongs entirely to these guys, they have the source code and still have access to the original developer.
    Similarly, Amiga hardware is common enough that spares are easily available, and there are also a number of places which specialise in repairing Amiga hardware to extend its lifespan.

    They could get the original developer to port the system to a new platform (although any platform current today will be just as obsolete as the amiga in 20 years and might not be as prevalent).

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  271. Wow - 343 comments, and *all* about calling it a P by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously?

    Nothing about the actual article and the millions quoted to replace these 19 Asia's (PI's and a half days coding instead?)...

  272. Re: Wow - 343 comments, and *all* about calling it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Asia's = Amiga's (obviously) - blasted autocorrect...

  273. YOU WOULD BE SURPRISED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somebody is making new C64 motherboards.

    https://icomp.de/shop-icomp/en/shop/product/c64-reloaded.html

  274. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by msauve · · Score: 1

    Newbie. I worked for the first Commodore PET reseller east of the Rockies. Sold (and built, for some of them), IMSAI, North Star, Cromemco, Apple, PET, Osbourne, Xerox, IBM PC, Compaq and others.

    Yes, "PC" was used for things other than the IBM PC.

    Yes, your shit memory is BS.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  275. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sexist much, aren't you?

    Women can run HVAC companies.

  276. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by gl4ss · · Score: 2

    just run an emulator on a pi.

    if it's serial or parallel it speaks out through, trivial to tweak it to work.

    and ebay has plenty of working amigas for many years..

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  277. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million par by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Raspberry Pi (2) FTW!!!!!

  278. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll contract to do it for them tomorrow for $750,000. Such deal.

    Yeah, let's see your HVAC certifications then? Insurance? Licensing?

    You mean you don't have anybody that will back your word that you can do the job, or do anything to be sure you fix the mistakes you make?

    They can fly me out and I'll spend a week examining all the specs I need to examine in person. Delivery: 6 months.

    Wow, you're promising that without even looking at the actual bid? Pretty bold commitment.

    I mean, Holy Crap, people. If an Amiga can do it, $2 million is clearly ridiculous.

    Oops... I mean... "Eh, MAYBE I could come down that far."

    And then you learn that the bid isn't for just the single Amiga, but a whole system wide maintenance, of which the Amiga control unit would merely be one single line-item of almost no consequence.

    So maybe you couldn't. And maybe they're glad they didn't even glance at the bid you didn't submit and never would because while talking big on Slashdot is easy, actually putting your body where your typing fingers purport to let you go is another matter.

  279. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Old IBM FE here. The 5150 was the IBM PC, the 5160 was the IBM PC XT and the 5170 was the IBM PC AT.

  280. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by radl33t · · Score: 1

    Using an aggressive setback on a programmable thermosat can save substantially a bit. A $200 programmable thermostat is a more costly than usual; thats typically the price point for a learning thermostat (which attempt to be programmable thermostats for lazy people, but aren't as good).

    For example I set back from 68 to 50 during the night when I sleep and during the day when I am working. For "average" outdoor temperature of lets say 30F, I slashed heating bill by 48% durring that setback. Since I am working and sleeping 75% of the day. Total savings are 36%. Utilities are cheap here, I pay ~$700 to heat and cool my place. So I don't save much (though, incidentally, enough to pay off a very cheap programmable thermostat in less than a heating season) Some people are spending $3000-$4000 to heat and cool moderately sized houses. Few weeks = 3 to 5 * 3000/52 = $173 to $288 in heating costs. Slashing that by 30% gives you at least $18-24/week savings.

    And this guy could easily have an extra ordinary situation such that he is measuring payback in weeks instead of months. e.g., in a heating climate he could have an St. Paul 1890 5900 sq ft house with an oil boiler from the same era, or in cooling climate Yuma AZ, a 1994 AC with uninstalled duct work running through the 160F attic. Yeah, in both situations they could substantially and cost effectively reduce operational costs using other methods, but this is the type of crap that permeates american construction.

  281. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are right, its super cheap. Schools are one of the favorite targets for exploitation by HVAC companies and controls contractors because they generally do not have the staff that know any better. My guess is that this is only a controls change and slight upgrades, $2m would be the cost for replacing the whole system on a a few hundred thousand square feet, which is 2-4 schools, maybe.

  282. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No Pork? Charging $110 to $150 an hour for controls technicians that are paid $15/hr and couldn't find their ass from a hole in the wall? HVAC controls are notoriously inefficient and duplicitous businesses. Lock you into vendor crap, then lock you in to their shit fucking programming (which they don't even know because they really locked you into some shit retarded tech who is long gone). For the record, I haven't gotten burned by controls contractors, I just fix what they do :-)

  283. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Amiga group became the Linux group.

  284. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Agripa · · Score: 1

    To be more correct, the 68000 certainly could support multitasking, both cooperative and preemptive -- it just could not fully support instruction restart after certain types of exceptions ( and this could not support virtual memory ala UNIX).

    I was puzzled by TechyImmigrant's comment and found the same thing. The 68000 saved enough state to handle interrupts which is needed for preemptive multitasking but not bus fault exceptions which are needed to support virtual memory like with a 68451 MMU.

    I am not aware of any CPUs which support interrupts that cannot support preemptive multitasking.

  285. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    I grew up in Las Vegas.

    That would be a non starter.

    Plus this is in the notoriously humid Pacific North West. Doesn't get very hot, relative to Vegas but it does get a littttllle damp.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  286. Your savings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is the loss of someone else's new car

  287. Too Bad by DaveJ45 · · Score: 1

    If a system programmed by a student in the 80's has worked adequately for this long, it's too bad the Grand Rapids Public School System didn't learn anything from this. There is no doubt that instead of putting 1.5 -2 million dollars of taxpayer funds into a replacement, they could instead replace this system with some additional student programming effort and some Raspberry PI units, at a minuscule fraction of that kind of expense. I'm glad I am no longer a taxpayer in the Grand Rapids area, this kind of spending of taxpayers' funding used to make me insane.

    --
    Differences between how you act when some one is watching, and how you act when no one is watching, define who you are
    1. Re:Too Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, if you think that the bid being talked could only possibly be for replacing a single control computer, and not an overhaul of the whole HVAC for all of those buildings where the equivalent to the Amiga will be a line item within it, but if that's the case, what you should do is go back to the school system that ostensibly educated you and demand they account for the failure of the education they gave you, since you couldn't even read the preceding posts in this discussion where responses that are substantially the same as your naive comment have already been posted, and the alternative considered.

      Yeah, I can maybe sorta forgive the first person to do it (and I can even forgive their love for the Raspberry Pi, the latest darling of the tech world), but you're about twelve hours behind, so maybe I hold you a bit more responsible for exercising some critical thinking now that you have a chance to do some reading.

      You did, right? You didn't just jump in with a reactionary post first thing, without browsing any of the discussion first, did you?

    2. Re:Too Bad by DaveJ45 · · Score: 1

      Imagine that. All that diatribe, and yet my comment still got a response from you anyway.

      --
      Differences between how you act when some one is watching, and how you act when no one is watching, define who you are
    3. Re:Too Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah somebody's upset that they got called on the sheer inane redundancy of their ignorance.

      Here's an idea, why don't you buy a Raspberry Pi and program it to get you a clue? Maybe you could contact all the local schools and see if they can help!

    4. Re:Too Bad by DaveJ45 · · Score: 1

      And somebody else apparently needs to get laid more frequently....

      --
      Differences between how you act when some one is watching, and how you act when no one is watching, define who you are
    5. Re:Too Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, you've already satisfactorily demonstrated your ignorance, you don't need to keep doing so.

      Nobody is in doubt, you're full of ignorance, and a full refund for your failed education should be issued. Just send in the letter.

    6. Re:Too Bad by DaveJ45 · · Score: 1

      If I am so ignorant, what does that say about you, that keeps this dialog going?

      --
      Differences between how you act when some one is watching, and how you act when no one is watching, define who you are
  288. Didn't it? by gwolf · · Score: 1

    There was a wholeline of Commodore PCs. The computing school I learnt at was a pure-Commodore shop, and it had some PCs that we students didn't ever care about.

  289. Missing the point by docfranz · · Score: 1

    I think the bigger point that is missed is THIS is how to do computer science in schools. We see articles all the time on here about how to teach a 3 year old how to code some shitty popup in javascript. This is the way computers were learned in the 80s, it's how I learned, you sit down and you figure something out related to a project you're interested in. You can sit a hundred students in a classroom and just go through a workbook it isn't fun, it isn't engaging, and for most of them it won't be remembered or used, and for the 3 kids in the class that want to actually learn how to use a computer/program a workbook is the last thing to give them they'll either have it completed before the teacher even gets to the section and worse will probably be scolded for working ahead for not following along. Set them up with a raspberrypi and SD card (unimaged) a box full of simple electronic sensors and give them time to figure things out. I think the message here is that I can't imagine a school district allowing a student to setup the HVAC controls for their buildings in this day and age, and I don't think it is entirely that everything is already pre-packaged, I think it's the mindset of adults that allowing a kid to touch something might break it and they don't understand how to fix it so they don't want the risk. Obviously sourcing a student to do this you would have to be careful, but even just allowing students to be part of the actual project would be useful, maybe you get the tech students that will go in to HVAC in with the project designers during the meetings and then you put them out there after school with the people doing the install so they can get some first hand knowledge. Instead the students will sit in their insulated bubble of a classroom learning about these things in an abstract way while the same skills and knowledge could be taught in an engaging way if they would literally just go to the basement and help set it up.

  290. Energy Savings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think a lot of people are missing the main reason on why older BAS's (Building Automation System) are replaced. The majority of the time, there is a case for the job to pay for itself simply via energy savings over 2, 5 or 10 years down the road. Maybe the lighting circuits are all manual, installing a modern system with motion detection would save energy. Maybe the classroom controls don't have the ability to do a night set back; A modern system would shut down the heating or cooling needs when no one is using the classroom at night.

    There are numerous ways a modern system can improve the efficiency of a building and reduce the energy it costs to run it. And given the fact that this initial system was coded by a student, there are most likely countless improvements that could be done improve both its efficiency and reliability.

  291. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At these prices, you can build it twice, and then if a part dies, replace it with the backup. Then rebuild that one.

  292. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by camperdave · · Score: 2

    Even unused, electronic components fail with age. Capacitors leak. Wires corrode. Plastics become brittle. Ceramics crack. Don't expect the same lifespan from your cold spares as you have gotten from your live device.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  293. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ArcadeMan · · Score: 1

    Around here, it gets so humid in the summer that we had to swim to get to school.

  294. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by camperdave · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Which begs the question - if it still works, why replace it?

    It raises the question. Begging the question means something completely different.

    No. Begging the question DOES mean raising the question.

    The term "begging the question" originated in the 16th century as a mistranslation of Latin petitio principii ("assuming the initial point").[2] In modern vernacular usage, "to beg the question" sometimes also means "to raise the question"

    Here's the thing: words and phrases can mean different things depending on the context. "Begs the question", when followed by a question means raises the question. "Begs the question" when talking about an argument means the obscure and antiquated English mis-translation of the older Latin mis-translation of the Greek phrase.

    I suggest that you give it a rest. You're fighting the same losing battle that was fought over "gay" and "hacker". You won't change the public's mind, so the best outcome you'll ever get is looking like a pompous blow-hard. So, if that's what you're after, then have at it. Otherwise, learn to shut your trap and roll with it.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  295. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by ArcadeMan · · Score: 2

    Usually, the older the hardware, the better it was built. I can still turn on my old computers from the 1980's and they all boot under one second. Do I trust my old hard drives from 2000~2005? Not so much.

    I don't trust anything made past ~1995. That's around the time companies realized that they didn't have to make hardware that could last for decades because upgrades would make their new shiny obsolete long before that.

  296. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    It took a lot longer than a few weeks to break even for me, but it was less than a year. Allowing different thermostat settings at different times and on different days made the house quite a lot more efficient.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  297. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forgot the Atari ST and the apple IIgs

  298. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by hucker75 · · Score: 1

    Oh you can't have opening windows! The stupid fuckwit kids would fall out! We must protect the stupid so they can reproduce and make even more stupid people! Have we forgotten how evolution works?

  299. if it ain't broke.... by SuperDre · · Score: 1

    Well, if that amiga is still running for over 30 years, it means it's one hell of a computer (have an amiga 500 myself in my garage somewhere)..
    And if it still works then why replace it..
    Also the blah blah million dollar is for replacing the whole system (AC/heating systems included) and not only the computers, otherwise there is something very VERY wrong, as replacing the computer itself with some software shouldn't be more than a couple of grand (mainly due to rewriting the software)..

  300. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, everyone else has to say "computa".

  301. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Growing up in England I didn't even hear the term "PC" until someone got a 386 machine running windows. We just called them either "computer" generically or referred to them by their brand names, with some variations. For example, I called my C64 "Commodore 64" while my dad called it "The '64" and some of my friends just called it "The Commodore".

    As for the Amiga, I was the only one of my friends that had one but we all just called it "Amiga". One of my friends had "an Atari" which I assume in retrospect was an "Atari 520 ST", but the exact model didn't stick in my mind.

    But yeah, the term "PC" never crossed our minds, perhaps because we'd never heard of a "non-personal" computer at that point.

    Maybe I'm just too young. :)

  302. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry but the term "home computer" was widely used in the early 80s. By the late 80s it had been replaced by PC.

  303. Not that unusual. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TSN (the Canadian version of ESPN, sort of) used an IBM PC portable for their teleprompter a few years ago, maybe they still do. There is a photo (can't find it now) of a Commodore 64 running the arrival/departure screens at an airport in the Caribbean. During the Y2K scare, there were programmers writing stuff for Ontario Hydro who were using ancient DEC (I think, they were the large ones with a separate drawer thing for whatever work they needed done) to control substations. I would suspect those machines are still around. One of Canada's largest investment companies was using a very antique mainframe within the last ten years or so. Language for that was Fortran but I could be mistaken on that.

  304. "Warm Safe and Dry"?!? by hucker75 · · Score: 1

    "Warm Safe and Dry"?!? Are these kids or kittens? For goodness sake....

  305. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Strider- · · Score: 1

    My first reaction was also to use some Rpi's at each location which could add up to under $200 per building I then considered the cost to forklift and upgrade the HVAC at each facility.

    Having been on both sides of this equation, I've come to the conclusion in my old age that rolling your own solution is rarely ever the right solution. Sure it might save you some money up front, but by the time you document things properly (you are getting full design, code and hardware documentation right?) you have probably spent as much, and you're still pretty much dependent on that one person not getting bored, or hit by a bus, or otherwise keel over.

    As much as I love to build things and hack on them, the reality is that for situations like this, the right solution is to go with a control system that will be supported by a manufacturer that will likely be around for a while. Honeywell, Rockwell Automation, etc... When shit goes down, you have somewhere to call.

    --
    ...si hoc legere nimium eruditionis habes...
  306. I just want to know... by joearf · · Score: 1

    Who sits there and types 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42 every hundred and eight minutes

    --
    -ARF!
  307. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by warpuck · · Score: 0

    They probably want to network them. Instead of sending someone to the locations to change or review the settings remote control it. This the age of instant gratification. That probably means they have to change HVAC too. The schools will probably save 80 hours a year in labor and travel time per year, maybe. Got to remember you are dealing with academia here, so do not expect things to make common sense. Most likely some persons brother in law will get a cost plus contract to "fix" the issue.

  308. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by warpuck · · Score: 0

    Idiocracy has went from a movie to a theory and on to fact

  309. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try cost modeling that against an already programmable system and tell me where you save 2 million dollars....

  310. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by warpuck · · Score: 0

    That would work in my house. My old lady is not going to take the time to learn how to change the temp whenever she feels too cold or too warm. Menopause,, married men often go through it. If she is to cold you get too warm. If she is warm you get too cold. I traded mine in for a newer younger model, so I have been there twice.

  311. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree it's a losing battle, but a common mistake is a mistake nonetheless.

    Once it becomes ingrained, though, it's impossible to fix: e.g. "terrific" (which used to mean "terrifying") will mean "excellent' from now until the end of days.

    It's not just a question of context. It stems from a misunderstanding of the use of "beg" to mean "assume" instead of "ask for." I don't see anything wrong with correcting misunderstandings when they occur.

  312. Wonderful Amiga by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reliability is the keyword going this long is amazing

  313. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because it's an obsessive compulsive thing to do. Like a dog on a fire hydrant.

  314. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The point is Macs existed yet.

  315. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by radarskiy · · Score: 2

    A high-school student was able to "engineer" a system that requires all of the walkie-talkies to be turned off for 15 minutes to operate. That is to say, not engineering at all because of the failure to start with defining requirements such as what other systems will be running simultaneously.

  316. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by radarskiy · · Score: 1

    "I just doubt that it needs to cost $2 million dollars..."

    Why do you doubt this? What is the largest HVAC control you have ever installed? What research have you done on the cost of HVAC control for comparable sized installations?

    Do your doubts have any foundation?

  317. If it is broke.... by radarskiy · · Score: 1

    The article explicitly states that it is becoming too hard to source replacements for failing parts, so in fact it *is* breaking.

  318. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by NorthWay · · Score: 1

    Take your incompetence and stuff it.

    Even a 6502 can make a pre-emptive operating system (though you hit all kinds of limits that are unpleasant).
    The problem with instruction restart (or continuation depending on the cpu) _only_ relates to bus control and as such to memory management (which is typically what causes the bus error).
    The 68000 design is lacking the necessary parts for accessing an address and having the OS recover and handle it when it is pointing to void and nothing or just a part of the address map where nothing lives.

    The 68010 added the necessary states and instruction to work together with an external MMU to do this.
    The other interesting solution was to run _2_ 68000 cpus in lockstep where the hw was designed to detect this and switch to the other cpu to run the offending instruction (there would obviously have to be some cleanup and mapping change before it could do so). Can't remember the name of the system that did it, but it was a Unix-like IIRC. Someone will now find a link to it in 5... 4... 3...

  319. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    What research have you done on the cost of HVAC control for comparable sized installations?

    Do your doubts have any foundation?

    Yes... a 30 year old desktop computer is running the system today, its replacement shouldn't cost 200 times as much...

  320. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Must not have been a very good renovation then.

  321. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    But It's probably a far sight more efficient for it's[sic] own power consumption than the "refrigerator" sized system it replaced.

    How much of the total power consumption is down to the control unit?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  322. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes... a 30 year old desktop computer is running the system today, its replacement shouldn't cost 200 times as much...

    You seem stuck on the idea that the 1.5-2 million dollar estimate was for the computer control overhead only, when it's more likely for all the control system modifications they've been wanting to do.

    Have you contacted Tim Hopkins of the Gran Rapids Public Schools to get him to clarify it for you, or are you going to wait till a business day? I suppose you could wait for the official bid to be released, but that might not be till 2016 or later.

  323. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    It was in use before there was an IBM PC, along with "personal computer" and "microcomputer." History proves you wrong.

    Tricky.

    "Personal Computer" definitely precedes the IBM PC - the British magazine "Personal Computer World" started in 1978. It also used the abbreviation PCW. I'm sure I had a book called "The Personal Computer Book" too but it annoyingly disappeared.

    Looking at a 1980 issue of "Personal Computer World" right now. The ad for the Sinclair ZX80 describes it as a "Personal Computer". However, skimming through the pages, the dominant term is "microcomputer" or "micro" and I certainly don't see any uses of the abbreviation "PC" jumping out at me from the pages (and I don't recall using it at the time) apart from the aforementioned PCW abbreviation of the magazine's title.

    Its pretty inconceivable that, since "personal computer" was in use, nobody ever abbreviated it, and I think someone's already posted an example of a computer with PC in the name. I think, though, its quite possible that the IBM PC popularised the use of PC as a stand-alone abbreviation.

    (Pity, because I don't like to give any credit to the mediocre pseudo-16-bit clunker of a CP/M box that stifled innovation for decades)

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  324. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're spending that kind of money a week on heating, your thermostats were't doing their job in the first place.

  325. Not a C64? by heroine · · Score: 1

    For crying out loud. Get rid of those crummy Amigas & put in proper C64's.

  326. 1987? by nessman · · Score: 1

    Big fucking deal. I take care of a number of large critical needs facilities who's phone systems have been around since the early 1990's (and a handful of older ones too). The shit works - why replace it?

  327. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My C64 is still running fine after all these years....... Actually its in better shape than the floppy disks that are slowly loosing their data.

  328. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

    As usual, your shitty posting history is confirmed by yet another piece of shit post. The 68010 had nothing to do with "instruction restart". Jesus Christ.

    Yes it did. It had a prefetch buffer added and retained enough state to undo an instruction when it hit a memory fault half way through executing the instruction. I have designed computers using the 68010 that took advantage of that.

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  329. Re: What is being missed... is the $2 million part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a question of insulation, not HVAC.

  330. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    "Yeah, you're just going to have to sit in the sweltering heat during summer school until ThunderfuckThor69 sends us the PSU we need for a 30 year old computer made by a company very few of you have ever heard of."

    Yeah, that'd go over well with me as a kid. Or my parents.

    So yeah - that's how it works and how it has worked for a long time. And if they replace them, it will be an "internet of things' solution, which the high school hackers will screw with anyhow.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  331. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by camperdave · · Score: 1

    It's not just a question of context. It stems from a misunderstanding of the use of "beg" to mean "assume" instead of "ask for."

    True. The mistake of using begging to mean assuming has been kicking around since the 16th century when "petitio principi" was mis-translated. Like you say, too late to do anything about it now.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  332. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by kimvette · · Score: 1

    That's because the power supply was dipped in epoxy resin - which is actually the major cause of C=64 power supply failures. The power supplies were very prone to overheating due to the epoxy encasement and were pretty much unserviceable due to the difficulty of getting to the components.

    Yours didn't fail due to spillage of sprite because the power supply was in effect waterproof.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  333. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by DG · · Score: 1

    Son, I was there. Owned 3 Amigas.

    Amigas were NOT PCs - and saying so in the wrong circles would get you shot.

    "PC" meant it ran MS-DOS.

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  334. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by DG · · Score: 1

    Amen brother.

    My 3 Amigas were NOT "PC"s. 2 of them were "PC compatible", thanks to Bridgeboards.

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  335. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by DG · · Score: 1

    The 1541, on the other hand, would misalign if you looked at it funny.

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  336. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by DG · · Score: 1

    -MB- is that you?

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  337. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by DG · · Score: 1

    No, it was fully preemptive right from the start. It was a major selling point.

    It was the Mac that did cooperative.

    Mind you, preemptive on a 68000 wasn't flawless. Saw a lot of GURU in the day.

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  338. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    It has nothing to do with "better built". Fundamental construction of electronic components haven't changed much over the years. Tin and silver components still grow whiskers. Exposed metal still corrodes. Electro-chemical components dry out and fail.

    Very few if any decent electronics fail due to shoddy design or engineered to fail reasons. Yes cheap shit Chinese crap with gobs of solder everywhere fail, but they are new releases and haven't displaced quality equipment in the slightest. The quality is still very much available if you care to look.

    Electronics have a MTTF whether they are hot or cold throughout their life. Many of the failure modes don't care in which state the equipment was kept. I hope you learn this the easy way rather than someone teaching you the hard way.

  339. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Ulric · · Score: 1

    The 68000 design is lacking the necessary parts for accessing an address and having the OS recover and handle it when it is pointing to void and nothing or just a part of the address map where nothing lives.

    The 68010 added the necessary states and instruction to work together with an external MMU to do this. The other interesting solution was to run _2_ 68000 cpus in lockstep where the hw was designed to detect this and switch to the other cpu to run the offending instruction (there would obviously have to be some cleanup and mapping change before it could do so). Can't remember the name of the system that did it, but it was a Unix-like IIRC. Someone will now find a link to it in 5... 4... 3...

    Early Apollo workstations.

  340. Super simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the HW is old. There are plenty of Virtual Commodore Emulators you can use on any OS. Just virtualize the H/W and keep the program running.
    Probably can be done by any startup for 20k (minimum project cost for something like this for QA and all... students could do it for 2k or even less). For anythings like modems, if you keep the same Amiga S/W via virtualization, the other interface H/W should not be hard to port to something newer.
        I use my C64 software via emulators today all the time.... its SO easy.

        Just dumb... millions for this.. come on!

  341. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by petermgreen · · Score: 1

    Several things have changed over the years with electronics.

    1: everything has got much smaller, as a general rule the smaller something is the harder it is to repair and the more vulnerable it is to things like tin whiskers,
    2: there are a much greater number of specialist short lifecycle parts used nowadays.
    3: hardware vendors have stopped releasing schematics for their products and the complexity of the boards has reached a level where noone is going to reverse engineer said schematics.
    4: in the early 2000s the EU introduced RoHS and effectively banned the use of lead in new electronics (with a handful of exceptions). Even if you don't live in Europe you were affected by this as manufacturers decided it was more economical to have one RoHS compliant product for sale worldwide than have seperate EU and non-EU versions. Lead-free solders and component finishes are far more prone to whiskers and cracking than lead based ones.

    The overall result of this is that newer hardware is often much harder to keep going than older hardware.

    Having said that you do want to be careful and keep an eye out for problems. Afaict the biggest cause of "damaged beyond economic repair" in 80s hardware is when a memory backup battery leaks over the main PCB and this goes unnoticed causing severe corrosion.

    --
    note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  342. Amigas used to rule... by BevanFindlay · · Score: 1

    So, back in the early 90s when we Amiga fans were thinking that the Amiga was the machine of the future, this wasn't really what we would have expected - that one of the last serious uses of one would be controlling an AC system... Well, at least while it controls their AC, they'd be able to still properly multitask and play MOD music and have several layers of side-scrolling beauty, haha. Times have changed.

  343. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    1. And that helps your 20 year old PC because? The size was the size back then. Also see point 2.
    2. False. There are plenty of specialist parts used nowadays that are specifically engineered to last. Your AC unit is not likely to be controlled by some built to the cheapest price HP piece of shit, but rather industrial parts which amongst other things don't go for latest and greatest specialist fads, aren't built to the lowest possible price, and to tie in with point number 1 frequently don't even feature miniaturised components, quite the opposite really as size and frailty are a well known correlation. e.g. I have a new off the shelf Modicon PLC CPU card sitting right next to me now, not a single surface mount component inside. Actually they use the same standard pitch connectors now as they did 20 years ago. Not everything is being crammed into your mobile phone.
    3. Why are you repairing old broken electronics rather than following clear end of life and upgrade path recommendations? Please go back to the top of the thread. Reviving and keeping alive old electronics = really REALLY bad practice.
    4. I agree with this in principle, but RoHS is an engineering problem, nothing more. Of note is that you don't see tin on connectors anymore. In fact you don't see a lot of poor reliability practices like tin plated circuit boards etc in general as the problems are known and engineered around. For example people often cite whiskering as a problem because lead was initially added to the tin to stop the problem, however they assume that the world has stood still in the meantime. There are many other alloys of solder now many of them immune to the problems that RoHS was initially blamed for. Heck for the most part tin whiskers can be stopped in their tracks by conformally coating a circuit board after production and placing dummy connectors on terminals which aren't in use or better still use individually shrouded female connectors on the board, a practice that I see used universally in industrial electronics these days but simply didn't exist back in the day. Oh by the way mixing of different soldering alloys is bad and is another reason why schematics aren't published and equipment is sent back to the manufacturer for repair.

    But some problems were real and were blameable on RoHS .... initially. For the most part when the switch was made to lead free there was little engineering knowledge of the impact on production. Lots of solder joints were cracked not because there was no lead in the solder but because the new composition wasn't engineered for, specifically higher melting temperatures, slower cooling times when baking, and thermal stress and expansion. Many of these problems have been solved on a part level by manufacturers.

    Anyway in summary the only reason people perceive electronics as getting less reliable is because of the new existence of really cheap and nasty electronics. Pay the correct price and you get the same reliability you always had, and understand that EOL means EOL for a reason, and not because vendors are simply trying to screw you by selling you cheap crap.

  344. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by demonrob · · Score: 1

    try the Amiga versions - they're even better! and yes, when I read the headline, I as well as most of the known universe presumed this was an old Commodore PC clone and not an Amiga.

  345. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by dave420 · · Score: 1

    That is not what the money is for. You seem to be confusing your opinion with the facts of the matter, which would explain why you just made an obvious statement no-one disagrees with, which have nothing to do with the story in question. You might as well have said "but bananas are yellow!" - it makes just as much sense. It's sad because you are clearly intelligent.

  346. Don't be stupid. by sabbede · · Score: 1

    Offer them a "deal" - one for $500k, both for $750k

  347. Apple II in the 1980s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 1982, I designed and installed an energy management system at the hospital I worked at, although I was "just" an electronics tech at the time. At the heart of the system was an Apple II computer, with a clock card, two RS-232 cards, a card for external floppy drives, and a printer card installed. I also pulled the power supply out of the case and left it outside the computer with a small fan blowing on it 24/7/365, to help dissipate the heat. The Apple II was connected through the RS-232 cards to an Instrulab data logger and to a Square-D controller that would actually turn steam valve solenoids on or off. I wrote the program in Applesoft Basic. Basically, it sent a string of characters to the data logger (which had a bunch of thermistors connected to it through twisted-pair copper wires--basically, everywhere we had a mechanical thermostat in the building, we put a thermistor next to the thermostat), and then the data logger would send the temperature in each zone back, and that would fill an array. Then, the Apple II stepped through the array, comparing each zone's current temperature to its high and low settings. If the temperature was above the high setting, the Apple II sent a signal to the Square-D controller to turn off the heat to that zone; if the temp was too low in that zone, it turned on the heat; if the temp was between the high and low settings, you left that zone's solenoid in its current state. Pretty simple.

    A couple of gotchas were that I had to write the control code to the data logger in assembly language, as Basic was too slow. With Basic, after sending the control sequence to the data logger, Applesoft Basic couldn't switch over to listening for the return values quickly enough, and would miss capturing the first few values. I basically studied the ROM code (in a disassember) from the RS-232 card to see how it communicated, then based my assembly code on that. Also, Square-D just assumed we would just use their provided software for our Apple II to manually turn zones on or off, so I had to reverse engineer their code to find the code sequences I needed to send to the device on an automated basis. Also, the Square-D software was on a "copy-protected" disk, so I first had to break their protection so I could read their code. Those were the fun days of programming!

    The funny thing is, now I work at a university, and we have Johnson Controls (pretending to) control the heating and cooling of our building, except that everyone complains that some rooms are always too hot or cold (and they are too hot or cold). My hardware/software solution from 1982, costing way fewer adjusted dollars, was WAY more efficient and did a way better job of actually controlling the temperature in rooms! I also could print reports on the daily/weekly high/low temps from my program, and had some other goodies in it.

    --Rusty

  348. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is just around the corner from me and while I completely agree the $1M + Price tag is silly there are more things to replace than JUST the Computer. All of the communications is over radios, the same frequency the district uses for communications! Yes they have to clear the airwaves at times to allow the computer to talk to the buildings. Clearly all of that needs to be replaced with something else, likely IP based communications over the districts network with a backup through another provider. Clearly the HVAC systems in most of these buildings have changed over the years and those interfaces will need refreshing as well.

    Many have pointed out that liability is vastly bigger today than in 1982. So perhaps a commercial solution is a better choice to avoid getting sued because someone caught a cold when heat didn't come on in 'building 14.'

    Nonetheless The vast price is likely quoted to get voters attention so they can settle in later for $250K or so.

  349. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

    To be more correct, the 68000 certainly could support multitasking, both cooperative and preemptive -- it just could not fully support instruction restart after certain types of exceptions ( and this could not support virtual memory ala UNIX).

    I was puzzled by TechyImmigrant's comment and found the same thing. The 68000 saved enough state to handle interrupts which is needed for preemptive multitasking but not bus fault exceptions which are needed to support virtual memory like with a 68451 MMU.

    I am not aware of any CPUs which support interrupts that cannot support preemptive multitasking.

    I too was puzzled by how I muddled up preemption with instruction restart for paging or virtual memory. I wasn't even drunk.

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  350. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by asylumx · · Score: 1

    Yeah. You could probably replace the thing with a raspberry pi .... at each location ... with a custom controller card.. and another one to control them all... for about $5,000 $2M ? Someone's pork barrel overfloweth.

    Well, you do have to find someone to do that work, and pay them, and also pay them to warranty their work when it inevitably breaks. Nothing costs just parts, you have to include labor and the example you just gave is all custom (which is exactly what they've got now, just with modern hardware). $2M may be too much but why don't you go submit your bid for $5k and let me know how that works out for you.

  351. Re:What is being missed... is the $2 million part. by asylumx · · Score: 1

    Around here, it gets so humid in the summer that we had to swim to get to school.

    Upstream both ways!

  352. i can top that... by iq145 · · Score: 1

    i still have my old Atari 800 XL and Commodore 64. Those are the first PCs i'd ever programmed/designed a video game on (of my own creation).

  353. Yep, we won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kneel before your AMIGA God puny PCS.

  354. Re:Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Daniel+Klugh · · Score: 1

    Read this:
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Display_list
    The Atari could certainly do that split-screen stuff via the "Display List". The Amiga was partially based off of the Atari. Some of the same engineers worked on the Amiga. It even has a more advanced version of the Atari's Display List functionality.
    And screen tearing stopped being a problem with the Atari. But usually only games try to v-synch with the screen. Those, and some text file viewers which support smooth scrolling. Of course you won't see anything like that in a window system; only full-screen programs. And remember that if you try out one of these old machines in an emulator, that your monitor's refresh rate must match, or be a multiple of, the emulated computer's refresh rate to see smooth scrolling.
    (make sure to activate the emulator's "vsync" feature as well)

    --
    Daniel Klugh
  355. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Threni · · Score: 1

    Sure but that comment... why post it anonymously? Afraid of reprisals?

  356. You're wrong. by gladius17 · · Score: 1

    "1. And that helps your 20 year old PC because? The size was the size back then. Also see point 2."

    Look fuckwit, you're simply wrong. Older computers (and everything else) are far more reliable, for reasons that the other guy already explained, and which everyone with eyes already knows from years of long experience. Now fuck off.

  357. Re: Commodore Amiga or Commodore PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cuz the mods are typically on crack, and I don't want to burn karma just because they fail at reading comprehension.