registration form - Stacks are the Stanford
Transcription
registration form - Stacks are the Stanford
1975 National Computer Conference and Exposition May 19-22, 1975 Anaheim Convention Center Anaheim, California ENER i\ / II 3 It 19 1 n uel ic 3 Lent Murched B. Simultaneously, the First Latin American imi Seminary of Program Coordinating team: %HM Jurgen Dussel \c 3 ical n.° 6 ni Fuc 6 ely le succ Ie ar j' M essing us yei DATA PROCESSING CONGRESS and IF ederatidn for Information Processim n Bth NATIONAL OF DATA COMMUNICATION pre he ve- Matan ie f FIRST LATIN AMERICAN SEMINARY vJelso ic \r ca. A Q ar zo ie ANHEMBI CONVENTION SAO PAULO - BRAZIL FIRST COMMUNICATION ial Coordinator: Jair Candi' INSCRIPTIONS Ie Bth National Data Processing Congress includes the participation in the First Latin American Seminary of Data Communication and can be made through an appropriate record It is important that the participants make their inscriptions before September 30, 75 this way assuring their hotel reservation and receiving of the anna For additional information please contac SUCESU SAO PAULO Ay. Paulista, 1159 - cj. 1404 01311 - Sao Paulo - BRAZIL »MmmTltjki' * miw a .jA^ammmm Bth CONGRESS PROGRAM :e: 3 opportunity TECHNICAL PROGRAM ion ake at Includes panels, meetings, papers presentation, conferenc and seminaries. M ', The papers presentation shall follow the rules already established by the Organizing Committee. The final date for the receiving of the papers is June 30, 1975. ■ Auditorium t and ser . - seating 370 I u persons STUDY COMMITTEE The subjects to be discussed during the Congress are related with the following areas: Papers related order the conclusions during the Congress. Computer in Business Administration Computer Networks and Data Communications. Seven Committees w m jdy ti ac e e in- am areas: Management Information. Computer in Education. Computer and the Law. Computer and Medicine. eprocesi Microfilm. Banking. Software Industry and Packages. Government Micro or Distributed Data Processing. Data Processing Financial, Industrial and Business Applications, Industrial Process Control made by the Computer. Technical and Scientific application Supermarkets. Teaching. DGRAM TECHNICAL VISITS AND FILMS 3C Lectures on the above mentioned items will be made by internationally known experts. Simultaneously with t Simultaneous translation will be available in English and Also movie pictures of greaat interest do L" Professionals will be showed n the Congre: Portuguese. being organized for the transportat ie important Companies Df 8th Q Dngre: 3 c 3L a 'C are ic at v 3 English Portuque: c ei 3r low r ro> cl< dinners of typical tablished. shows and October - 27-31, «Bth. NATIONAL DATA PROCESSING CONGRESS Brazil Anhembi Convention Center Sao Paulo 1975 REGISTRATION — - FORM NAME CITY HOME ADDRESS E-i Z STATE < DEGREE HELD M FIRM v H TELEPHONE SCHOOL UNIVERSITY HIGH SCHOOL CITY ADDRESS TITLE PROFESSION as < AGE IN CASE OF EMERGENCY NOTIFY - NAME TELEPHONE CITY TOTAL NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS PARTICIPANT US$ 100,00 X ACCOMPANYING PERSON US$ 30,00 x ► SUB-TOTAL (A) c -H 0 1 8 * <v ■P * ra CATEGORY Ist 2nd 3rd Q □ [ SINGLE DOUBLE D O No. OF ROOMS □ □□ D * (1) DOUBLE US$ 58 00 51 00 ' ' US$ 37,00 US$ 47,00 US$ 29,00 US$ 33,00 HOTEL (2) RESERVE DEPOSIT NO. OF ROOMS US$ 50,00 X SUB-TOTAL (B) = fc ■ 10 O RATES SINGLE US US$ I DAILY HOTEL CHOICE - NOTES pjj Tl) Maximum rates for the category. Breakfast included. Will be deducted from hotel bill. c (2) .2 i TOTAL (A + B) 2 PAYMENT co Payment order of amount (A +B) should be addressed to: $ « 89 Congresso Nacional de Processamento de Dados Paulo S.A. Banco do Estado de Agencia Patriarca - 3190300055-6. - Sao Paulo 01002 CEP SAO PAULO - BRASIL ' Payment order number - Remitting Bank After having made the payment order, please mail this form to: Congresso Nacional de Processamento de Dados \ cj 1404 Ay. Paulista, 1159 CEP 01311 BRASIL ysao Paulo / " ©/89 ( —M^" - . - - and addresses of accompanying persons and additional participants side this must be shown " Names with hotel reservation be received prior to " September 30th. that order receipt be presented to the and the proceedings. " It is in order to receive of on reverse form. must Registration forms necessary secretary of Congress payment an identification badge u fm ? B.° CONGRESSO NACIONAL DE PROCESSAMENTO DE DADOS AY. SAO PAULO - 1159 - CJ. 1404 BRASIL - CEP 01311 (Run Time II APPLICATIONS 50 Mm.) EYES FOR COMPUTERS - Basic principles of pioneering efforts of computer71 Mm. Mi vision researchers. Genenal Motou Coiponatlan - Describes the various ways that computers are being used to satisfy a large variety of information needsin an on-line environment. 18 Mm. Unlveulty oi Callioinla Extension Media. Centen ACCESS the growSPIRES/BALLOTS REPORT - How computers are being used to control ing mass of library materials and costs of manual processing systems. 15 Mm. Unlveulty oi Calliotnla Extension Media Centen. - An automated lab notebook to augment the biomedical sientist's understanding and visualization of his research data. 10 Mm. Bolt SeA.an.zk and Newman Inc. PROPHET (Run Time 11l POTPOURRI - 1 Hr. rQ/DPUTER SCIENCE FILJ) THEATRE 50 Mm.) COMPUTER ANIMATION - Exhibits animations generated by both analog and digital computers for weather displays, architectural and engineering stress analysis, aircraft navigation and landing instruction, and as 30 Mm. works of art. Unlve>ulty oi Callionnla Extension Media Centen LITRES AND GRAMS - Traces the history of our present measurement reasons for the switch to metrics, and explains the basic 11 Mm. elements of the metric system. General Motoni Conponatlon system, details CAREER AWARENESS - COMPUTER INDUSTRIES - Information careers in the problem-solving possibilities of computers and industry. Mju Instnuctional Media. Sen.vlc.e4 Explosion explores computer 11 Mm. ROBOTS GET SMARTER - Three experimental robots under development at Stanford Research Institute are demonstrated and discussed. 30 Mm. Unlveulty oi Callionnla Extension Media Centen - ENERGY: THE CRITICAL CHOICES AHEAD Depicts the U.S. energy supply situation, its long time implications, and points to steps that must be taken 27 Mm. to meet this situation. U.S. Vepantment oi Commence FILM SCHEDULE group will begin at the times shown below Each film MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY II APPLICATIONS I-C COMPUTER GRAPHICS I-A COMPUTER GRAPHICS 111 POTPOURRI I-B COMPUTER GRAPHICS I-D COMPUTER GRAPHICS I-A COMPUTER GRAPHICS II APPLICATIONS I-A COMPUTER GRAPHICS II APPLICATIONS 111 POTPOURRI I-C COMPUTER GRAPHICS I-B COMPUTER GRAPHICS I-D COMPUTER GRAPHICS I-B COMPUTER GRAPHICS I-A COMPUTER GRAPHICS 2:00 PM 2:50 PM 3:30 PM 1} : °0 AM 12:50 PM 2:05 PM 2:40 PM 4:15 PM 11:00AM 12:35 PM 1:25 !! M 3:15 PM 3:50 PM 11:00 AM 11:35 AM 12:50 PM 1975 NCC HUNTINGTON BEACH ROOM ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER MAY 19-22, 1975 1 COMPUTER GRAPHICS films (Run Time - 1 Hr. 34 Mm.) - A series of artistic the film mechanical-analog LAPIS - Made on a his in Eastern studies and the filmmaker's 8 Mm. meditation into visual form. James Whitney MATRIX 111 - A portrayal of 'visual harmonies'. path or matrix, dots, and lines pursue each other on a in John Whitney Sn. 10 Mm. folk done on an unusual COYOTE & SKUNK - Illustrates animation. that parallels standard 7 Mm. Blandlng Indian Education Centen/ colored imagery, multiplied and GOOGOLPLEX in Lillian Schwantz/Ken Knouilton 5 1/2 Mm. computer GROUP A unique attempt to put system, experiences represents Triangles, hexagons, Lissajous-shaped nesting patterns. periodically clustering Navajo analog system closely Experiments optical printing. legends, cartoon Computet Image Conp. by digital - Features digital imagery set to a tab! a solo by PERMUTATIONS 7 Mm. Balachander. John Whitney, Sn. many types APOTHEOSIS - An intense exploration in black and white of of images possible using Knowlton's EXPLOR language. 4 1/2 Mm. Lillian Schwantz/Ken Knouillon techniques, technical display I HAD AN IDEA An artistic spinoff from 10 Mm. using a digital computer and optical printing. Gany Vemoi METADATA This film was made on the advanced 'key-frame' system at the National Research Council of Canada. Veten T-oldei 10 Mm. aesthetically-motivated film from the SORCERER'S APPRENTICE An Boeing Co.'s ten-year sponsorship of computer graphics and animation. Soundtrack is the famous composition of the title. William Tetten 5 Mm. and film openers of various television titles sampler NRC SAMPLER A produced on the NRC 'key-frame' graphics system. 12 Mm. National KzieaKch Council oi Canada analog-computer graphics, by colored optical HO RAYS Features WHO 7 Mm. printing. Stan Uandenbeek sensations, combinPHOSPHENES A young boy's discovery of phosphene ing live-action with analog-computer graphics. 4 1/2 Mm. Enankle Toiten film about a creature who gets JEKYLLUM An unusual and entertaining evil ideas after reading a chemistry book. Jean Baudot, et at 4 Mm. - - - - - films. (Run Time - 1 Hr. 13 Mm.) - A series of technical 3-D COMPUTER STUDIES - A quick look some of the kinds of aid the scientist or researcher. displays available 3 Mm. Alamoi Sclentlilc Labi scale, on a time greatly-reduced shows, PRESSURE PATTERNS - This film a sonar transducer. the generated in a fluid medium computer GROUP B at computer to Loi patterns Vn. Henny by Bnlgham Young Unlveulty 5 Mm. - THE TAINTED SKY Changes in pollution emissions over time in the 8 Mm. Los Angeles area. Kent Wilson and The Senses Buneau, U.C.S.V. accurately are used to Computer DWARF graphics SIRIUS & THE WHITE zoom in and study the star Sirius and its companion. 8 Mm. Vn. M.L. Meeki, Hayitack Obienvatony a are shown with discussion together CLUSTERS Two star clusters STAR of the techniques used to gather basic information on these formations. 8 Mm. Vn. M.L. Meeks, Hayitack Obienvatony & MOTION - An early computer film showing the motion of orbiting bodies for various force-distance laws. 10 Mm. Ed lajac, Bell Telephone Lab pilot's view A4B-F4B A Navy jet landing on a carrier at sea. The 4 Mm. was simulated from design data. William Tetten, Boeing Co. students at the by SAMPLER An edited collection of short films SIU Computer Graphics Lab, SIU. Applications range from typography to animated architectural drawings. Students oi W. T-etten, Southenn 10 Mm. Illinois Unlvemity a HALF-TONE ANIMATION Two applications developed by the face and a hand, are shown in detail. University oi Utah 5 Mm. Ened Panke 6 Ed NRC Sampler A sampler of various television titles and film openers produced on the NRC 'key-frame' graphics system.. National Reieanch Council oi Canada 12 Mm. GROUP C (Run Time 36 Mm.) - - - - - - - - Demonstrates how a powerful astrometric tool, the determines the line-of-sight velocities of stars. 8 Mm. Chanlei H. Hull, Houghton MlHtin Co. MAN IN SPACE Presents three-dimensional dynamic computer models of the Space Shuttle and Space Station depicting the construction of space 13 Mm. station vehicle in orbit. Genignaphlcs, Genenal Electnlc Co. multiplicity develops offspring generates whose DISCOVERY Creation cosmic conflict. The discovery of fragmentation brings harmony. Gany Vemo6 8 Mm. computerized compression, With the aid of time this MOTION OF STARS film examines the motions of stars in the Big Dipper over a period of 7 Mm. 100,000 years. Chanlei H. Hull, Houghton MlUlln Co. THE DOPPLER EFFECT Doppler - - GROUP D (Run Time - 35 Mm.) -- life. SHAPES - Shapes from the source of all energy Gany Vemoi 6 Mm. COMPUTER COLOR GENERATIONS- Discusses a technique that produces color film from the computer without any increase in computer time over an 23 Mm. equivalent black and white run. Loi Alamoi Sclentlilc Lab RAINBOW PASS The stars form a peaceful pattern, until examination yields the deamons at the entrance to Rainbow Pass. Gany Vemoi 6 Mm. - National Computer Conference te officers ar Fir express their special th Newsweekfor its continu in the industries' many bus iucational 4 / t X Guide for tr mil INDEX ALPHABETICAL INDEX (Alphabetical by Exh 4 There is only one dry COM system. It offers fast easy set-up, speeds through-put and turn-around, and cuts rejects. PRODUCT INDEX By fi xhibit Ar FLOOR PLAN— Exhibit Areas 74-75 Now get 3M's LBR -exclusive dry processing and laser-beam techno oq the most advanced COM available. The Laser Beam writes directly or microfiche or 16mm microfilm (no photographing a CRT here!) The Re )rd works with tape from almost any computer. Simple once-only form alignment speeds job set-up and through-put. . . reduces rejects anc i-wastinq re-runs. The Dry Processor needs no chemicals, no clear ir no plumbing, no drains. It can be located in the EDP room so you car heF id dispatch microfilm quickly... return tape to the library at once. A processing is up to five times faster than wet chemical processing -ye reliably produces clear, sharp film frame after frame Compa division, 3M Company, Let 3M show it to you. Write Microfilm Products Division, 3aul, MN 55101 and ask about the dry COM LBR 3M brings microfilm of age...3So!Ei If your memory can't take the heat, it isn't an Ampex TlNcore. Nobody else makes a memory device that has the temperature stability of Ampex TIN* cores. Their super-stable parameters let you build systems that can write cold, read hot, write hot, and read cold, and cycle between extremes as wide as minus 50 to plus 100 degrees centigrade all day long without loss of margins. Punched from CJNIBIT" core tape, these exceptionally uniform Ampex TIN cores make up into the most thermally stable, high performance random access memories in the world. Ampex TIN cores are available as loose cores or in planar stacks and complete memory systems. Standard industrial or full military specs are available. When the chips are down, Ampex TIN cores keep right on working. Visit AMPEX in Booth 1421 Ampex Memory Products Division 13031 West Jefferson Boulevard Marina del Rey, California 90291 (213) 821-8933 *TIN is our wordfor Temperature Independent, the common sense core TM Ampex PRESIDENT'S LETTER Welcome to the 1975National Computer Conference — This conference the third of the annual NCC's is the first AFIPS-sponsored Conference west of the Rockies since the 1972 Fall Joint Computer Conference. The Anaheim location, following our conferences in New York (1973) and Chicago (1974), completes a 3-year cycle of geographic migration from East to West. — We expect the 75 NCC to be outstanding in every respect and we hope you will agree! To make your visit to the exhibits even more productive, AFIPS (with the generous support of Newsweek) is pleased to bring you this Exhibit Guide. It provides you with brief summaries of the products and services on display by some 260 exhibiting companies Because of the size of the exhibits, we urge you to use the Exhibit Guide to plan your tour of the exhibit halls. The guide is also an excellent quick reference and reminder of what you have seen here, so take it with you when you return to your office. The Exhibit Guide also contains information on the technical sessions that make up this year's conference program —one of the most comprehensive programs ever put together. We hope you'll have the opportunity to attend several sessions during your visit here this week. make this all new 30 eps printer one of the best printer values available. Breakthroughs that are ° line with " designed you on to , keep , Ta -AA simphf.ed maintenance anda extended service life, backed by trained ,technicians -nii ." " " in 92 locations nationwide ready to serve you. ... . ■ .. j . j handling your decision-making information more efficiently. c c ." a. For ,more information on the . TermiNet 30 matrixprinter write e al b,ectnc Genera om^: rf " " Electric \Comrnnv Data Communication Products T ta ,_ M ST in .«r . ° °' WayneSb r For your special kind of needs a special kind of printer GENERALM ELECTRIC 794-15 w V,rgima As President of AFIPS, and on behalf of the National Computer Conference Board, I want to thank each of the exhibiting companiesfor investing their time, effort, and resources to provide attendees with the latest information on their products and services. We're pleased that they regard the NCC as worthwhile. If you agree, please tell them so. We're glad you came to the 75 NCC. Take a critical and thoughtful look at the very latest developments in the industry— and enjoy it! Cordially, JjLr George Glaser, President American Federation of Information Processing Societies, Inc. 9 1976 NATIONAI COMPUTER CONFERENCE Ifyou're seriously interested in where computers are going, drop by our exhibit at the National Computer Conference and we'll demonstrate CP-Yfbryou. JUNE 7-10,1976 " NEW YORK COLISEUM Attend and Participate ■ In 1976 the world's biggest and best computer conference—the greatest data processing exhibit on carth returns to the New York Coliseum. You remember the First NCC in the in 1973. It had a record-breaking attendance of 33,000 data processing professionals: directors, managers, users and computer specialists. — Performance - Productivity - Profits A conference keyed to present and projected economic conditions is being developed for this occasion. Its program will feature the latest and most important ideas and contributions in all areas of relevance to the computing community including the computer's impact on our global society. At its center will be the year's largest display of hard- ware, systems and services. Plan to attend and exhibit in the 76 NCC in New York The Steering Committee welcomes your comments, suggestions and participation in the 1976 NCC. For information please contact: Stanley Winkler Carl Hammer ConferenceChairman Program Chairman UNIVAC IBM 2121 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W. 18100Frederick Pike Washington, D.C. 20007 Gaithersburg, MD 20760 20" 202/338-4958 301/840-7384 is a 10 trademark ol XEROX Exhibit space for 1976 may be reserved this week at the NCC Show or from Management Office in the Anaheim Convention Avenue, Montvale, Headquarters, AFIPS 210 Summit NJ 07645 (Call toll-free 800/631-7070; or dial 201/391-9810 in New Jersey). 11 How to choose the match for what Just contact Remex. Remex offers a complete line of reliable, economical peripherals for use in N/C, phototypesetting, minicomputer, and other kinds of data-handling systems. Punched tape readers, reader/ spoolers, and OEM transports featuring the latest technology in tape handling, precision sprocket drives,andopticalreadingsystems. Punched tape perforator systems, mechanisms and perforator/ reader combinations designed around the most advanced, efficient 75 characters per second and 120 characters per second punching devices for paper or mylar tape. Plus plug-in interface packages for use with most popular minicomputers. Digital Cassette punched tape emulators (PTE) which are functionally compatible with present punched tape systems, but will increase your system's speed and capacity many fold. Ask us about our software compatible PTE computer interfaces, Digital dr for the Digital cassette drives discriminating OEM looking for the ultimate in data reliability in a low cost magnetic tape peripheral, Flexible disk systems which are fully IBM 3740 compatible, with a wide range of options such as field expandability, DMA and programmed I/O interfaces, full operating system software, and perfect peripheral you have to do. more. The broadest line of flexible disk systems available. Flexible disk drives for the OEM expecting the latest in technology and product support from an establishedsupplier at competitive prices. There is no match for the Remex flexible Remex flexible disk disk drive. drive. Whichever kind of equipment you need, we II be happy to arrange for a demonstration. For information, contact Remex, Ex-Cell-0 Corporation, 1733 Alton St., P. O. Box 11926, Santa Ana, Cal. 92711. Or phone (714) 557-6860. In Europe and the U.K. contact S.p.A. Microtecnica, Torino, Italy, VVG work with you Remex TZf\ f^ See us at the M -- 8«ik4400 Peripheral Product Ex-Cell-0 Corporation CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE TUESDAY morning MONDAY afternoon 2:00 p.m. -3:40 p.m. PROGRAM National Centers for Scientific Computing G. Stuart Patterson, Jr. 8:15a.m.-9:55 a.m. 3:50 p.m. -5:30 p.m. FUNDING Communication Robert Barton INTERACTIVE Graphic Models of Physical Systems Charles M. Eastman — Portability and Reliability David fi. Wortman Software MicroprocessorBasics Microprocessors at Work Hob Walker Paul M. Russo — Programming Art, Science, or Engineering? Brian W. Kernighan Bipolar Microprocessors Ted Laliotis Issues in Programming Language Design Anthony I. Wasserman COBOL 74 REQUIREMENTS Developer and User Views of User Requirements Richard G. Mills SOCIAL Information Processing: Its Impact Upon Society Through Library Systems Susan Crowe Technology Transfer: A Smouldering National Issue Richard G. Mills B. Ray Traweek Systems Technology on Banking Operations Larry Dort _ - — of Communications-Based Computing Applied to Societal Problems Donald L. Thomsen, Jr. Making Computers Safer Through Licensing, Certification, or Professional Responsibility Oliver R. Smoot Banking's "Back Office" Paper Problems and Approaches to Solutions Watson M. McKee, Jr. Data Processing EducationA View from Education — A Reaction from Industry Thomas J. Cashmanl Gary B. Shelly Thomas E. Bell Making Computers Safer Through Good Practices Bruce Gilchrist Making Computers Safer Through Auditing William E. Perry EDP Future Prospects in Data 111 Processing Siegfried Treu — Data Base Technology in the Banking Industry Bernard K. Plagman SAFER — Future Prospects in Data II Processing Orrin E. Taulbee EDUCATION IMPACT Software Engineering INDUSTRY FORECASTING Future Prospects in Data I Processing Earl c Joseph sessions.) Paul Oliver Implications and Applications Making Computers Safer Through Technology Eldred Nelson — Its Impact on Software Engineering Electronic Funds Transfer Systems: What's In It for You? Microprogramming and Microcomputer Programming Harut Barsamian (See next continuation MAKING COMPUTERS USER 3:50 p.m. -5:30 p.m. SOFTWARE BANKING GRAPHICS Economics of Computer Graphics Systems Ira W. Cotton 2:00 p.m. -3:40 p.m. MICROPROCESSORS COMPUTER Programming as an Act of 10:05 a.m. -11 :45 a.m. I AFIPS Programs Paul W. Berthiaume TUESDAY afternoon Advances in Computer Technology Through AerospaceRequirements Richard H. Thayer — CURRICULA — TRAINING Graduate and Undergraduate Programs in Computer Science Barry L. Bateman Computer Education for a Computerized Age Julius A. Archibald, Jr. Use of Computers in Instruction Sylvia Charp SPECIAL SESSION 8:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. The Editors Speak Out Hesh Wiener — KEYNOTE 10:00 a.m. ADDRESS Speaker: Prof. Jay W. Forrester MIT 14 CONFERENCE LUNCHEON — 12:00 p.m. 1:45 p.m. Speaker: Neil Gorchow Sperry Univac SPECIAL SESSION 8:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Data Processing in 1980-1985 Ted Dolotta — 15 For room location consult Program Booklet. (Continued) CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE WEDNESDAY afternoon WEDNESDAY morning DATA Tutorial and Panel Discussion on Relational Data Base 2:00 p.m. -3:40 p.m. 10:05 a.m. -11 :45 a.m. 8:15 a.m. -9:55 a.m. COMPUTER SOFTWARE David M. Dahm VIEWPOINT — LEGAL ASPECTS OF Enhancing Storage Reliability by Sophisticated Coding COMPUTER INTERNATIONAL Status Report Vinton Cert International Data Communication Policy Alex Curran HEALTH What Went Wrong With Medical Information Systems: An Optimistic Outlook CARE Computer Applications in Ambulatory Care Carlos Vallbona Packaged Data Management Systems Harold Uhrbach A Managerial Perspective of the Evolution and Future of Data Processing: A Data Processing Executive View JohnF. Rockart Future Trends in the Law of Computers Susan H. Nycum Distributed Data Bases and Applications Eugene I. Lowenthal Packet Radio: Future Impact Advances in Packet Radio Communication Harry L. Van Trees Robert E. Kahn COMPUTERS New ADplications in Printing and Publishing Joseph J. Guiteras Computer-Aided Manufacturing Tony C. Woo System Implications of Advancing Storage Technology Jerome H. Saltzer Impact of New Technologies on Computer Systems Architecture Gerald Estrin DIALOGUE AND U Design and Implementation of Distributed Systems David J. Farber Management Issues in Computers John J. Donovan APPLICATIONS INTERACTION — Interface and Software Standards Japanese and European Viewpoints Sami dePicciotto Innovative Applications of Computer Science in Medicine G. Anthony Gorry OF Computer System Simulation and Performance Evaluation Hans Kaspar Data Bases in the Humanities James Joyce TECHNOLOGY AND ARCHITECTURE New Advances in ProcessorMemory-Switch Architectures Stuart E. Madnick INNOVATIVE The Impact of Computer InterfaceStandards Thomas J. Alshuk 3:50 p.m. -5:30 p.m. Performance Evaluation, Data Compression and Search E. E. Lindstrom A Managerial Perspective of the Evolution and Future of Data Processing: A User Executive View John F. Rockart MANAGEMENT Advances in Novel Storage Technologies John C. Davis Schemes Jack Moshman Public Packet-Switching Selection Techniques for TECHNOLOGY The Mass Storage Impact John R. Morrison MANAGEMENT Advances in PacketSwitching David C. Walden MANAGEMENT AND — F. Sherwood Lewis BASE Query Languages and Comparative Evaluation Ben Shneiderman Computer Communications: Who, What, When, Where, and Why? Howard Frank EDP Legal Aid for EDP Managers Computer-Related Tax, Recordkeeping, Insurance, and Labor Questions Roy N. Freed Aspects 2:00 p.m. -3:40 p.m. COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS Psychological Research on the Use of Computer Languages James H. Carlisle Managing the New Programming Technologies Don Moehrke Antitrust and Regulatory STORAGE ON Relational Data Base Technology Dennis W. Fife THURSDAY afternoon 10:05 a.m.-11 :45 a.m. DATA MEASURES Workload Characterization Kenneth W. Kolence Program Verification in 1980 Ralph L. London Issues and Answers Data Security and Personal Privacy James A. Case Legal Responsibilities in Buying, Using, and Selling Data Processing Robert P. Bigelow DESIGN 8:15 a.m. -9:55 a.m. IE Government Funding in Computer Science Kent K. Curtis Implementations (continued) USERS' Optimizing the Computer Installation Leo J. Cohen FUNDING Relational Data Base Data Base Machines Michael M. Hammer Management Edgar F. Codd Operating Systems Theory R. Stockton Games 3:50 p.m. -5:30 p.m. MANAGEMENT I BASE THURSDAY morning APPLICATIONS Innovative Applications of Computer Science in Education Alan Kay Data and Memory Management Architectures Jeftery P. Buzen OF COMPUTER Innovative Applications of Computer Science in Automation Richard L. Paul Panel Discussion on Technology and Architecture Richard P. Case SCIENCE Knowledge-Based Expert Systems Norton R. Greenield COMPUTERS Medical Information Systems G. Ocfo Barnett Future Directions in Medical Computing Marsden S. Blois, Jr. Jan F. Brandejs SPECIAL ADDRESS 1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. Speaker: The Honorable Jimmy Carter Former Governor of Georgia — SPECIAL SESSION — 2:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. Pioneer Day — INDUSTRY LUNCHEON 12:00 p.m. 1:45 p.m. Speaker: Gov. John E. Sheehan Federal Reserve System 1975 National Computer Conference on Audio Cassettes The National Computer Conference has invited Convention Seminar Cassettes to tape record many sessions of this year's Conference. Cassettes can be purchased immediately after each session. For further visit the CSC desk in the registration area. 16 17 1 The 2nd USA-Japan Computer Conference TokyoAug. 26,27,28,75 Sponsored by the American Federation of Information Processing Societies and the Information Processing Society of Japan. This international conference provides a unique opportunity for computer professionals from the two leading computer countries to meet and exchange ideas in their areas of specialization. Common and different data processing problems will be identified, and the similarities and dissimilarities of methodologies used to achieve solutions will be discussed in technical sessions. f A major exhibit will feature the latest in products and services from both countries. Post meeting technical tours will be conducted to demonstrate advanced applications in such areas as banks, railroads and steel mills. Mini -Memory. From Dataram. Either way, you get more memory, more throughput, more performance. Everything but more cost. 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Find out more return this coupon at once, or call us at 609-799-0071. PDP-8/M PDP-11/05 Travel and Accommodations p^^ __——■—___— Mm OJ IZ2^Z^JLLmILAm ll'lilU'lifilll'lf I , princeton-hightstown road cranbury, NEW JERSEY jersey 08512 08512 new tel-609-799-0071 twx 510-685-2542 ; 620/L-100 PDP-11/35 PDP-11/40 V-71 V-72 PDP-11/ 45 DCC 116 116E □ □ 620/ L 622/ , I'd like more answers about min.-memor.es for my minicomputer. Please send information. Please have a salesman contact me. Varian 620/f 620/ i PDP-11/10 To find out more about the conference, travel arrangements, accommodations, costs and arrangements, please complete the coupon below and mail it today. — , Data General The first USA -Japan Computer Conference was a highly successful professional event. The second conference should be even more rewarding as it's being built upon the successful experience of the first conference. Data processing specialists interested in attending should plan now toward making the simple but necessary arrangements. i I I V-73 Name Title — | I j Phone Company V " 74 Address- I City. zip- A travel package for attending the conference costs $699.00 and includes round trip air transportation from Los Angeles, San Francisco or New York (add $180.00), by Japan Air Lines. Also included are 11 nights at the Tokyo Prince Hotel (add $51 .00), conference headquarters or at the Imperial Hotel, and round trip transfers between airport and hotel in Tokyo, sightseeing, travel and other services. Special arrangements have been made for a five day side trip to Hong Kong, including accommodations at the A varied program of Sheraton Hong Kong, for also trips through Japan side will be available. Families are cordially invited to accompany attendees. 2nd USA -Japan Computer Conference Tokyo Aug. 26, 27, 28, 75 NAME ADDRESS ZIP. For more information about the conference please complete and mail to AFIPS: 210 Summit Avenue, Montvale, New Jersey 07645 I The equipment A family of terminals and communications products— most of which use advanced Large Scale Integration (LSI) technology— is available for use with Systems Network Architecture. All utilize Synchronous Data Link Control (SDLC), a flexible, more efficient line control method. The sixteen latest additions comprise the IBM 3767 Communication Terminal, the IBM 3770 Data Communication System and new models of the IBM 3270 Information Display System. The 3767 is a bidirectional keyboardprinter with a speed of 40 or 80 characters per second. It can be readily incorporated into existing configurations. Someof its uses include inquiry, inquiry and update, lowvolume data entry, program test and debug, and problem solving. It is equally at home in the sales department, an insurance agency or engineering office, or in the programming IBM's comprehensive approach to data communications. Communicating with a central computer through remote terminals has evolved rapidly in recent years. Numerous data communications devices have come into use, including a variety of terminals, line control methodsand programming support. Many of these elements are incompatible with one another, often requiring costly duplication of facilities. IBM has introduced a landmark data communications development for teleprocessing. It's called Advanced Function for Communications through Systems Network Architecture. And uses IBM System/370 computers with virtual storage, of which it is a logical extension. This communications capability was formerly available only for specific industries. Now it is offered for use throughout business, industry, education and government to improve productivity and simplify the development of new applications. The concept This approach applies a unifying design to the entire data communications function as System/360 didfor the computer ten years ago. A combination of equipment and computerprograms, Systems NetworkArchitecture permits users to move freely from one IBM terminal-based system to another with a minimum of application programming changes. And since this approach establishes a clear separation between network management and user application functions, improved use of the network and a more economical framework for applications growth become possible. The programming With Systems Network Architecture, one data communications network is available for many uses. The network handles multiple on-line applications in a broad range of user environments. Terminals and equipment, on any line, can be shared among many different applications in the computer. As a result, it is now possible for multiple terminals, on any line, to talk with different programs in the System/370. This is accomplished by three major programming elements: the virtual operating system; the Network Control Program (NCP/VS) resident in the IBM 3704/3705 Communications Controller; and VTAM, the teleprocessing access method for System/370 virtual systems. These programs work together to build a comprehensive terminal system on a single A unifying designfor data communications networks.. . an immense step toward fulfilling the computing potential of the Seventies. line— using a common line discipline, a common networkcontrol program and a common access method. Networks can become easier to develop, easier to maintain. Communications control functions are moved from the central computer and distributed into the network. This can reduce line traffic and thus lighten the load on the computer. And because you can process more than one application on a single terminal, as well as have numerous terminals sharing a common communications line, you may be able to operate with fewer terminals and lines. department. The 3770 is a group of four different operator-oriented remote terminals, combining a keyboard and printer with a modular selection of input/output devices and communications features. For example, the 3774 Communication Terminal, with a bidirectional printer withspeeds up to 80 characters per second, can become a multimedia batch terminal by adding such optional units as a card reader, a card punch, one or two diskette storage devices, and a line printer. Advanced Function for Communications through Systems Network Architecture. It can be an immense step toward fulfilling the computing potential of the Seventies, with its emphasis on data base/data communications systems. For more information, contact your local IBM Data Processing Division office. Or write IBM Corporation, Dept. 83F, 1133 Westchester Avenue, White T_" v Plains, New York 10604. LDIfl DataProcessing Division ! AFIPS congratulates sw Dr. Kenneth E. Iverson 1975 Har ry Goode Award Re i M f a a a c H eractiv 1 w the ?l t c 360 3rv € Ut f Ed a proje ng progra H tin 16 jde 3 th ti a i ar a t V m for th h awar ent ALPHABETICAL INDEX TO EXHIBITING COMPANIES Booth No. 1251, 1253, 1255 INC. ACTION COMMUNICATION 10300 N. Central Expressway, Dallas, Texas 75231 Bill Moore Tel: (214) 750-3329 The ACTION TELECONTROLLER Models 100, 200 and 300 are data communications processors providing users with proven reliability and incorporating many new features. The Model 200 provides faster transfer of data by core switching and other advantages. The Model 300 represents a major breakthrough in communications. Two processors linked via high speed link combine device control and line handling facilities of a communications processor with test editing and file handling facilities of a data processing system. Booth No. 1247 INC. ADDISON-WESLEY PUBLISHING Jacob Way, Reading, Massachusetts 01867 Norman A. Stanton Tel: (617) 944-3700 ext. 384 Products to be displayed include texts and reference books dealing with mathematics, physics, electronics and computer science which will be of interest to practitioners and students of all levels. Booth No. 1207 AFIPS PRESS 210 Summit Avenue, Montvale, New Jersey 07645 Nelle W. Morgan Tel: (201) 391-9810 Proceedings of the National Computer Conference as well as numerous books, pamphlets and brochures relating to the information processing field. Booth No. 2421 AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH CO. 680 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10019 Charles Brockman Tel: (201) 540-6821 "Total Responsibility" for supplying endto-end communicationsin the data transmission field is the central theme of the Bell System's exhibit. Elements of this responsibility include the newly-introduced Dataphone® Digital Service (DDS), the family of data sets and the Dataspeed® 40 Data ter- ! minal. DDS is a private line interstate network for data communications which is currently serving five cities and designed to serve nineteen more cities by the end of this year. The family of data sets include Dataphone® 9600,4800, 2400, 1800, and 1200, designed to operate from 1200 to 9600 bits per second. Dataspeed 40 terminals transmit at up to 1200 BPS with simpler data preparation and is comprised of hard copy printer, visual display device and operator's console. Bell System Communications Consultants are on hand to discuss these products and services. Booth No. 2714, 2716 AMERICAN VIDEONETICS CORPORATION 795 Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, California 94086 Rhine Meyering Tel: (408) 732-2000 1. Cartridge Digital Magnetic Tape Recorders. 2. High performance magnetic read/ write heads. 3. Special purpose small business computers. 24 1421 AMPEX CORPORATION Memory Products Division 13031 West JeffersonBoulevard Marina del Rey, California 90291 Clyde R. Cornwell Tel: (213) 821 -8933 Standard and custom core memories and stacks featuring 16K and 32K sense windings and temperature independent(TIN) cores for commercial and military sys- Booth No. tems. Plug-interchangeable memories and disk sub-systems for IBM, Univac, and DEC System 10 computers. An audio-visual presentation will explain the core tape process used by Ampex to produce its new UNIBIT" cores. Data Products Division 401 Broadway, Redwood City, California94063 Cliff Leath Tel: (415) 367-2758 Tape and disk drives demonstratedoffer a wide variety of performance levels and capacities for OEM computer and systems manufacturers. Featured will be a new DM9OO series disk drives which provide from 40 to 200 megabytes of storage in four models, all with compatible interface. Models 940 and 980 store 40 and 80 megabytes respectively on five-high disk packs; models DM9IOO and 9200 store 100 and 200 megabytes respectively on ten-high disk packs. Also shown, will be tape drives and formatters for low, medium and high performance applications. Advanced Systems Department 1020Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, California 94086 Ken Gootgeld Tel: (408) 738-4910 A version of the AmpexTBM" Mass Storage System will be demonstrated. TBM, a forerunner of the IBM 3850, provides online storage of 11 to 350 billion bytes. An IBM user-transparent 3330 type disk staging interface is operational for OS/ MVT with and TSO. Other DEC) mainframe interfaces (i. c., are presently being implemented. Booth No. 1561 ANAHEIM PUBLISHING COMPANY 1120 E. Ash, Fullerton, California 92631 John F. Cashman, Sr. Tel: (714) 879-7922 Textbooks and workbooks for beginning and advanced data processing classes. All works authored or edited by Gary B. the leadShelly andThomas J. ing business data processing educators in the United States. Booth No. 2645 ANDERSON INC. 1065 Morse Avenue, Sunnyvale, California 94086 Tel: (408) 734-4030 Since its beginning in early 1967 as the first manufacturer of acoustic couplers, Anderson Jacobson, Inc. has continued to develop products for the data communications and computer terminals markets. Data communications products include a variety of OEM and end user modems and acoustic couplers as well as a 1200 baud coupler which is believed to be the only one of its kind in production today. Data terminal line includes the 10 character per second (eps) Teletype with certain improvements. At 15 eps, the AJ 841 Selectronic Terminal provides unequaled print quality. At 30 eps, there are two terminals, the AJ 630-non-impact terminal and the AJ 830 hard copy terminal. Booth No. 1243, 1245 THE ANSUL COMPANY Marinette,Wisconsin 54143 One Stanton R. 0. Evenson Tel: (715) 735-7411 The Ansul Company will display their entire line of fire protection equipment with particular emphasis on the Ansul Halon 1301 Fire Control Systems for computer installations. Booth No. 2500 APPLIED COMPUTING TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED ACT Marketing, Inc. 2486 Huntington Dr., San Marino, California 91108 Donald McCombes Tel: (213) 570-0854 ACT introduces a 132 column incremental printer suitablefor most business and communication terminal applications. This printer prints at a speed of 120 characters per second in both directions. Reliability at a low cost has been achieved by reducing the number of mechanical parts and by using an advanced electronic design. Booth No. 2342 APPLIED DATA COMMUNICATIONS 1509East McFadden Aye., Santa Ana, Calif. 92705 Roger Saville Tel: (714) 547-6954 Series 61 IBM Compatible Floppy Disk System and Series 42 ANSI Compatible 3M Tape Cartridge System operating on Data General DEC PDPII and NOVA and Intellec 8/Mod 80. Micro-com- puter computer for terminal communication systems. Intelligent floppy disk system Series 62 with Intel 8080 Microprocesser, IBM Compatible Floppy Disk, 3MTape System, printer, R5232 and CRT terminals. Series 41 Program Loading Unit for PDPII, push-button controlled memory loader 128 and 256 word PROM quad board for PDPII. Booth No. 2332 APPLIED DIGITAL DATA SYSTEMS, INC. 100 Marcus Boulevard, Hauppauge, N.Y. 11787 William T. Hendrix Tel: (516) 231-5400 Video Display terminals ranging from character by character transmission to Page and Line (Buffered) modes of transmission with formatting, graphics, upper & blinking, full editing & relower case, peripheral mote control capabilities. There are four (4) configurations of features with desk top and rack mount version of each. Booth No. 2301 APPLIED SYSTEMS CORPORATION Mich. 48081 26401 Harper Aye., St. Clair Marty Wyrod Tel: (313) 779-8700 ASC Communications Controller for use in programmable terminal control, message buffering, communications switching or line concentration applications in computer data transmission and communications networks with multiple asynchronous or synchronous (Bi-Sync) data lines. Also, the new ASC MicroProcessor System for data acquisition, monitoring and control applications. Booth No. 1563 ARCUS, INC. 26062 Eden Landing Road, Hayward, Calif. 94545 Thomas H. Seefurth Tel: (415) 785-5760 The ARCUS service features the basic concept of vital records protection, or "off-site" storage. The service offers computer users an economical and efficient means of periodically cycling and securely storing such critical media as magnetic tape, disk, hard copy, tabulating or aperature cards, and microfilm and microfiche. Users benefit from having a disciplined and controlled program of "offsite" vital records protection, including the transportation and storage of files in a strict security m CRT nnsuuers rf? environment. Booth No. 1248 ASTROCOM CORPORATION Clinton nas 15012Minnetonka IndustrialRoad Minnetonka, Minnesota 55343 Thomas H. Frahm Tel: (612) 933-2208 1. Low and medium speed data sets (0-2400 BPS) equivalent to the West- nnsuuers ern Electric data sets. 2. Medium and high speed short haul BPS). data sets (2000 to 3. Special data communications equip- tor CRT applications. ment. a. Automatic dialing equipment. b. Automatic port contention units. 0!i Booth No. 1465 ATLANTIC RESEARCH CORPORATION 5390 Cherokee Avenue, Alexandria, Virginia 22314 Garland 0. Audilet Tel: (703) 354-3400 ext. 621 The portable Data Communications System Test Unit "INTERSHAKE" will be displayed. INTERSHAKE tests terminal and modem hardware and communication facilities as well as software. It automatically intermixes over 60 different data communications tests, including trapping selected chars, logging chars in any position in the data stream, transmitting control chars and text, activating EIA control leads, measuring and generating time delays, and conducting any of eight canned protocol tests. Online it is transparent, providing a monitoring, trapping, and logging capability on either half- or full-duplex lines. Offline it allows the user to simulate either modem or terminal exactly like the system (including timing. ) Booth No. 2403, 2405 AUERBACH PUBLISHERS INC. Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 121 NorthBroad Milton Strassberg Tel: (609) 662-2070 Ext. 271 The AUERBACH Information Management Series is a unique service comprised of portfolios that provide insight into the problems of managers in data processing, computer programming and Many of our customers are faced with unique design and engineeringproblems. To solve them, we have 1 77,649 pre-engineered CRT solutions. In addition, Clinton applicationengineersare experiencedin developingCathode Ray Tubes to fit your specific requirements providing high quality and optimum reliability. From low profile, high resolution alpha-numeric displays to compact medical monitoring applications in quantities of 1 to 1 ,000,000, Clinton is a name you can rely on for quality, performance and personal attention. Let us send you our brochure describing Clinton's facilities and capabilities. Contact our Sales Manager Carl Phillipps. CL.iriTon... tne gngujeg people in CRT's. Stop and see us at Booth No 1308-1310 1 975 National Computer and Exposition May 19-22. data communications. The AUERBACH EDP subscription services comprise comprehensive, exhaustive and authoritative guides for the user of computer hardware, services and technology. These subscription services include three publication groups : AUERBACH Computer Technology Report Se- ries, AUERBACH EDP Notebook Series and the AUERBACH Guide Series. " EaSHMIIB A*. br the computer experts who are still questioning, T&per, terminals, or COM?" Bell & Hondl presents the compatible COM. You have been through all the pros and cor hundred times about the various options for utilizing computer output to the fullest. However, to the information you already have about COM perse, we would like to add a few things about the Bell & Howell COM which you might find comforting. I I Bell & Howell's COM is compatible with most computers now in use. It speaks virtually any compute language. It requires a minimum of alteration to your own programming. Job setup is inputted through universal punched cards, so human error is substan tiallyreduced. And our COM's throughput time is up there with the best of them, including some COM systems that are far more expensive a Bell&Hdluell t Booth No. 1547 BALL BROTHERS RESEARCH CORPORATION/ ELECTRONIC DISPLAY DIVISION 1633 Terrace Drive, St. Paul, Minnesota 55113 George H. Wagner Tel: (612) 633-1742 CRT Displays for alphanumeric information will be featured in both monochrome and color format. The many configurations shown will demonstrate the extreme flexibility available in CRT size, frame design, phosphor type, character display and performance capability. Booth No. 1221 BASIC TIMESHARING INC. 650 North Mary Avenue, Sunnyvale, Calif. 94086 Peter Johnson Tel: (408) 733-1122 The 1975 NCC is the first public showing of Basic Timesharing's new Model 4000 Series Interactive Timesharing Systems. Completely new hardware in the 4000 systems includes the central processor, disk and tape controllers and communications processor. BTI 4000 systems can be "clustered" so as to share central processor and disk storage and can be expanded incrementally to support from 16 to 256 concurrent users. A clustered 4000 system will be on display, with multiple terminals at which visitors can evaluate system performance. Booth No. 2649, 2651 BDT BURO-UND DATENTECHNIK GMBH P.O. Box 80, 0-7210 Rottweil, West Germany Hans G. Boeck W. Germany 0741 /8041 Telex 0762876 BDT Forms Handling Devices for Serial Printers. Simple mounting brackets permit adaptation to all types of serial I printers. FT 212 Forms Tractor, programmable tractor for fast continuous form slew. Functions: Line tion, top of form. vertical tabula- FF 70 Front Feed Device, for front feeding and automatic line feed of ledger cards, cut forms and multiple part form sets. MLC 512 Magnetic Stripe Ledger Card Front Feed System. Complete MLC peripheral system, processor controlled, micro programmed, 512 byte buffer. Stripe capacity 512 bytes. Booth No. 1553 BEEHIVE TERMINALS P.O. Box 19244. 870 West 2600 South Salt Lake City, Utah 84120 Carl Rasmussen Tel: (801) 487-0741 Beehive Terminals will exhibit their new Mini Bee 4, Super Bee 3, Texterm, and a special terminal designed for library applications at the NCC. Mini Bee 4 is a silent replacement for buffered teleprinters, while micro-programmable Super Bee 3 boasts a high quality polling capability. Texterm meets the text-editing demands of the publishing industry with unprecedented functions and features. Additionally, Beehive will make an an equipment. Booth No. 2545 BENWILL PUBLISHING CORPORATION 167 Corey Road, Brookline, Massachusetts02146 George Palken Tel: (617) 232-5470 DIGITAL DESIGN features detailed engineering information for designers of digital circuitry and systems in all in- — dustries. MINICOMPUTER NEWS features in-depth news analysis for users of minicomputers, peripherals, software and related services. — Booth No. 1667 BOEING COMPUTER INC. P.O. Box 708, Dover, New Jersey 07801 R. L Pavely Tel: (201)361-2121 three different remote computing services, each with hardware and operating systems designed to meet a specific set of customer needs. SARA computer capacity management system. Booth No. 1447 CALIFORNIA COMPUTER INC. (CALCOMP) 2411 West LaPalma Avenue, Anaheim, Calif. 92801 Ted Lorber/Greg Thomas Tel: (714) 821-2795 TRIDENT The TRIDENT series is a removable pack disk drive offering 3330 technology in a high density, low cost per bit package. The TRIDENT Family features 25, 50 and 80 megabytes of storage. 140 FLOPPY DISK DRIVE/ 1140 FORMATTER The 140 "Floppy Disk" drive is a random access, removable media, memory device.The 140 provides the OEM system designer with a reliable, flexible and inexpensive method of transferring digital data at high speed. The 1140 Floppy Disk Formatter is a micro-processor controlled subsystem designed to handle up to four 140 Floppy Disks. VIRTUAL TERMINAL SYSTEM CalComp's Virtual Terminal System (VTS) features the ability to appear and perform as a variety of computer terminals to the CPU. The VTS can perform as a front-end information processing system, a distributed intelligent system, a universal controller for a variety of peripheral devices or in various combinations. MODEL 960 BELTBED PLOTTER Booth No. 2328 The newest addition to CalComp's plotter line is the Model 960 Beltbed Plotter. Model 960 pictures data quickly and with high quality, while offering flatbed flexibility to produce graphic output on a variety of media. BELL & HOWELL COMPANY— Electronics & Instruments Group 360 Sierra Madre Villa, Pasadena, Calif. 91109 Michael S. Slrota Tel: (213) 796-9381 Optical Mark Reader Equipment, including the Intelligent Mark Reader (IMR) MICROFICHE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM CalComp's Microfiche Management System provides users with a high speed technique of recording alphanumeric computer output on 105mm microfiche in a variety of user selectedformats. nouncement at show time. 28 for use in data entry applications; tne Remittance Payment System for use in one-step processing of credit card payments; and other peripheral Booth No. 2108 CAL-TRONIX PRIVACY SYSTEMS 1102 College Aye., Santa Rosa, California 95404 R. J. Villa Tel: (707) 525-8000 Data Privacy Systems, Voice & Telephone Privacy Systems, Countermeasure Surveillance Equipment, Privacy Protection Eavesdropping Countermeasure Equipment and other various confidential communications equipment. Also provide service and equipment to protect conference rooms and high level meetings from electronic listening devices. Booth No. 2661, 2663 CANON INC. 10 Nevada Drive, Lake NewYork 11040 Mr. T. Saito Tel: (516) 488-6700 Ext. 356 NP non-impact line printer. Endless digital cassette memory. Booth No. 2641 CARACTERES USA, INC. 56 Cummings Park, Woburn, Massachusetts 01801 Eric Bauer Tel: (617) 935-6813 Production of: Typeslugs, levels, sectors, wheels, typeshafts, drums, bars, barrels, chains, balls, daisies, fingers, and all other kinds of types on any support. Out of: Nitrided aluminum, modern plastics, metalized plastics, etc. For: Typewriters, adding and accounting machines, calculators, in and output equipment, high speed printers, numbering machines, measuring equipment, telecommunications and all other equip- ment where types are required Booth No. 1724 CENTRONICS DATA COMPUTER CORP. Hudson, New Hampshire 03051 George Rea Tel: (603) 883-0111 Printers and Teleprinters Wide selection of lowcost medium speed dot matrix impact printers, range in speed from 88 characters per second up to 1000 characters per second (from 25 to 300 lines per minute) in 80 or 132 columns. 1200 Baud incremental teleprinters with 165 character per second printing speed in — 80 or 132 columns. Booth No. 2110 CHAPMAN STATIC ELIMINATORS (THE PORTLAND COMPANY) Portland, Maine 04112 Peter Bishop Tel: (207) 773-4726 Chapman Static Eliminator Division of the Portland Company will display models of shockless, high voltage static elim- 58 Fore inating equipment specifically designed to remove static caused operating difficulties common to machines used in the data processing field. This equipment is compact in design, safe (5 milliamperes maximum) and will not interfere with sensitive electronic circuits. Models are available to meet the various levels of static intensity which may be encountered in a variety of equipment. Quantity discounts and OEM prices are available. Booth No. 2719, 2721, 2723, 2725 CHERRY ELECTRICAL PRODUCTS CORPORATION 3600 Sunset Avenue, Waukegan, Illinois 60085 Frank Amendola Tel: (312) 689-7702 Cherry manufactures a complete line of coil spring snap-action switches, thumb- Sois Canon's other new programthe SX-100. And their talent with words—as well as numbers—can spell truly simplified dataprocessing for you. these conversational calculators have internal alphanumeric capability.They can be programmed to literally ask questionsthat elicit the properresponses. So anyone with virtually no training can process data. And obtain meaningful results, too, fully labeledand formatted. Because these display-printing calculators produce hard copy on tape in 24- or 48-character widths, they giveyou complete freedom to format output as graphs, charts anything you please. And since these calculators use algebraiclogic rather than an esoteric machi ne language, they are easy to program, too.They're capableof conditionaland unconditionalbranching, jumping and looping. Indirect memoryaddress. Subroutinenesting, Programs are storedon smoothloading magnetic cards. Both come with afull complement of trigonometric function keys. But if mable / _J*M »».i^«« -^y| M "■ mmmmmmwm | m^KmwmwmW'* J it 40 <B»; *-'"■M "ami mm mm "^ h 1 fg 11 11 Complete software packages are available. And we'llcustom-tailor programs to your requirements as as well. wen. series, send For details details on our SX series, senc today in the coupon today. . Where r^ ' quality is the constant factor. M > ZXf% JVM®Electronic IX^<M I W\J 1 1 Calculators . 1 Systems Sales Division you have no use for cosines and tangents, you can customizefive of them as convenient program-select keys for your most recurrent problems. Taken together, theSX calculators offer a wideand flexible range of capacities thatcan be arranged to suit your needs.The SX-100 comes with 50 memories and 500 steps that can be increased to 100 memories, 1000 steps. The SX-310's basic array of 50 memories, 500 stepscan be incremented to a maximumof 500 memories, 4000 steps. The SX-310 is interfaceablewith typewriters and other peripheral equipment. I_ Canon USA, Inc. 10 Nevada Drive I Lake Success, NY. 11040 ■ YoUr sx series sounds like what ive I been looking . | , i m interested in its applicationto the field of j- T1 Q P|ease I □ piease send me a brochure on ' I . I ' | nsx „ nsx | ■ 100 Name Address I | I i i Phone L_______ —— J wheel switches, keyboard switches, matrix selector switches, electronic data entry keyboards, and "Plasma-Lux" Gas Discharge Displays. New products being exhibited include the smallest thumbwheel switch (T-50) measuring 8 x 18 mm., 30 Amp. Switch (E3O), and gold crosspoint contact switches for low energy switching applications. Booth No. 2447 CINCINNATI MILACRON PROCESS CONTROLS DIVISION Lebanon, Ohio 45036 Norm Towson Tel: (513) 494-5349 Cincinnati Milacron Process Controls Division is displaying a CIP 22008 Computer System featuring Version 3 CiMOS Software. The demonstration packages include: a full capability RPG based alternative to System 3, Remote Batch Communications simulation, Multiple CRT/DATA entry and Multi-Programming Software. Demonstrations include an executive game for visitor participation. Booth No. 2426, 2428 CIPHER DATA PRODUCTS 7510 Clairemont Mesa Blvd. San Diego, California 92111 Robert K. Hoist Tel: (714) 279-6550 Cipher Data Products manufactures digital magnetic tape transports and mag- I Or what will you get out of NCC ? ... Make the NCC more than a trip to Disneyland especially in the eyes of your co-workers back home. Bring back a Free Trial Subscription to any of the four Datapro services, and make your visit to Anaheim well worth the cost. More than 16,000 EDP and office systems professionals use Datapro's money-saving information every day. Especially these days. Stop by Booth 1551, and get your Free Trial Subscription* to Datapro 70, Datapro Reports on Minicomputers, Datapro Reports on Banking Automation, or Datapro Reports on Office Systems. Then go home (or to Disneyland), knowing you've made your trip to the NCC pay off for you and your company. And use Datapro's hard facts and independent opinions all year long and save enough to send you and your boss to the 76 NCC. ... *To all qualified EDP/Office — personnel datapro DATAPRO RESEARCH CORPORATION 1805 Underwood Boulevard Delran, New Jersey 08075 609/764/0100 netic tape formatters/controllers making the product line completely plug compatible to any mini-computer. The product line includes fully-formatted incremental transports capable of data-collection up to 1250 cps. Cipher also manufactures the only bi-directional operating digital cassette transport avail- able with or without controller. The T-4000 tape transport, designed for the telephone industry is a continuous transport which operates on Fastgdry fire protection for COMPUTERS V-J K3 I ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT IRREPLACEABLE RECORDS PEOPLE sa ■"— "* s 48VDC. Booth No. 1308, 1310 CLINTON ELECTRONICS CORPORATION 6701 Clinton Road, Rockford Illinois 61111 Carl G. Phllllppt Tel: (815) 633-1444 Clinton Electronics Corporation designs and manufactures magnetic deflection cathode ray tubes to meet their customer's specifications for visual display, alpha-numeric terminals, medical electronics, video recording monitors, and high resolution and printout tubes in sizes from 3" to 23". Equipped with the most modern manufacturing and testing Clinton's 280,000 square foot plant serves a world wide market, and can produce either engineering prototypes or production quantities in 4 to 6 weeks. Booth No. 1405 CODEX CORPORATION 15Riverdale Aye., Newton, Massachusetts 02195 Ralph Lowry or Bobby Boykln Tel: (617) 969-0600 Complete line of modems and multiplexers for high speed data transmission. Products include a line of TDM's which accommodate a wide range of synchronous and asynchronous channels, Group Band Multiplexer, 9600, 7200, and 4800 Modems, 4800 Dial-up Modem, 48001 L See live demonstrations every hour at Booth 1121. i <ffISJ)KALON MHuiMTO" HOI AW/nitE /Amy EXTINCUISHANT w CCITT compatible modem, Group Band Modem, 296 Biplexer which permits transmission at speeds up to 19.2 Kbps over voice grade lines. Modem Sharing Units, Port Sharing Units, Local Distribution Service Units and Tech Control Facilities. Booth No. 2240 COMDATA CORPORATION Illinois 60076 8115 Monticello, Walter L. Manning Tel: (312) 677-3900 Data Communications Equipment. Modems: Automatic answering with CBS or Private line; Stand alone and rack mounted equivalent to Bell Systems 103A, 103E, 103F, 113A, 1138, 201A, 2018, and 202C. P. C. modems for OEM. Acoustic Couplers: Stand alone and build-in kit for TTY; P. C. modem and acoustic coupling unit for OEM. Frequency Division Multiplexer: Mixed data rates up to 600 baud; contention for multidrop channels, voices-plus up to 6 TTY colored display panel. Terminals: Series 33 KSR and ASR TTY terminals with acoustic couplers and modems; TWX/DDD Terminals; Model 933 teletypewriter/plotter based on Diablo HyType mechanism. Booth No. 2654, 2656 COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS, INC. 2610 Columbia Torrance, California 90503 Charles B. Bailey, Jr. Tel: (213) 320-9101 Booth No. 2642, 2644 COMPU-SERV INC. 5000 Arlington Centre Boulevard Ohio 43220 R. G. Citterberg Tel: (614) 457-8600 Remote computing services. Booth No. 1603 COMPUTER DECISIONS 50 Essex Rochelle Park, N.J. 07662 Don Huber Tel: (201) 843-0550 COMPUTER DECISIONS Magazine. COMPUTER DECISIONS Census of Computer Sites USA. Booth No. 2619, 2621 COMPUTER-LINK CORPORATION 14 Cambridge Burlington, Massachusetts 01803 E. P. Brandeis Tel: (617) 272-7400 New universal ribbon re-inking machine that saves thousands of dollars in the first year; computer-controlled forms processing equipment; magnetic tape, disc pack maintenance equipment including cleaners, inspectors, and testers. Booth No. 2364 COMPUTER MAGAZINE (lEEE COMPUTER SOCIETY) Long Beach, Calif. 90803 5855 Naples Plaza, H. T. A. 0. Peck Tel: (213) 438-9951 COMPUTER Magazine, technical publications of the lEEE Computer Society, membership information. ELECTRONICS. Booth No. 1215, 1217 COMPUTER DEVICES INC. 9 Ray Avenue, Burlington, Massachusetts 01803 William F. Tilley Tel: (617) 273-1550 COMPUTER DEVICES INC. manufactures and markets the TELETERM family of portable timesharing terminals and equipment. Portable CDI TELETERMS are also offered in more special-purpose configurations than any other terminal on the market. For example, APL, MULand variety of ASCII or non-ASCII code sets are available in portable models that weigh as little as 22 pounds. At NCC 75 CDI will display the full family of accessories to make TELETERMS more useful in more places; and a new version of CDls unique new printer for OEM applications. 32 Booth No. 2401 CONTINENTAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS Midtown Plaza, Syracuse, New York 13210 W. G. Pomeroy Tel: (315) 474-5776 CIS is both an equipment dealer and equipment leaser, with both new and used systems. We can offer a full range of Data Processing financial alternatives. Buy, sell, lease, sublease,or exchange we would like to discuss how our services may add a new dimension to your plan- ... ning. Booth No. 1261, 1263 COMPUTER OPERATIONS, INC. 10774Tucker Beltsville, Maryland 20705 Ray Bushnell Tel: (301) 937-5377 LINC Tape direct access mass memory for mini computers, Ultra-reliable over 500 thousand consecutive passes with ZERO bit errors. High speed 8400 bytes/ sec. Plug compatible with your mini. Complete software OPERATING SYSTEMS for program development. 671, 744 bytes/reel. Also available in combination systems with rapid access hard disc(s). Booth No. 2300, 2302 COMPUTERWORLD Newton, Massachusetts 02160 797 Washington W. Walter Boyd Tel: (617) 965-5800 Computerworld is written and edited for the people in the computer community the management, professional, and technical people who design computers and automatic data systems, who analyze how they are to be used, who program them, and who manage their use. The publication's news columns report the technical and business developments in communicomputer hardware, cations, services, education, etc. — Booth No. 2633 COMPUTER DESIGN PUBLISHING CORP. Massachusetts 01742 221 Baker Aye., A. J. Saltalamacchia Tel: (617) 369-6660 COMPUTER DESIGN magazine. DATA SHEET DIRECTORYofDIGITAL Booth No. 1125 CONTACT SYSTEMS INC. Miry Brook Road, Danbury, Connecticut 06470 John Pompea Tel: (203) 743-3837 Low cost wire wrap machines and contract wrapping services. Booth No. 1167 COMTAL CORPORATION 333 N. Santa Anita Aye., Arcadia, California91006 Ed Johnson Tel: (213) 445-0764 The COMTAL Image Processing System will be displaying high resolution, true Booth No. 2441 CONTROL DATA CORPORATION Minneapolis, Minnesota 55440 P.O. Box 0, T.W.Johnston Tel: (612) 853-4545 Control Data's exhibit features peripheral systems and products, and examples of the firm's Total Services offerings. Display highlights include the new CDC mass storage tape system and an IBMcompatible terminal system. Also displayed is a full range of OEM perhipheral products for the small business system: floppy, cartridge disk and storage module drives; printer, terminal and memory products; disk packs, magnetic tape, forms and imprinters. Remote batch and time-sharing applications of Control Data's CYBERNET Services are described, as are capabilities of the firm's network consulting, engineering and architectural services. Booth No. 2462 COOKE ENGINEERING COMPANY Division of Dynatech Laboratories, Inc. 900 Slaters Lane,Alexandria, Virginia 22314 Jesse F. Lancaster Tel: (703) 548-3889 E.I. A. RS-232 Data Patching and Switching Equipments. On display will be a complete line of switching and patching arrangements that allows 100% flexibility in interconnection of digital circuits between data terminal and data communications equipments. Booth No. 2552 color, pseudo color and black/white 722 INC. E. Evelyn Avenue, Sunnyvale, California 94086 images. Techniques of image processing J. Gwinner Tel: (408) 738-0530 through the use of COMTAL Function Memories within the system will be dem- The new 1975 model 8001 A Four Color Penetration CRT Monitor will be onstrated using a variety of applications. Beam on display. The Shadow Mask CRT is not used. Instead, The Beam Penetration Booth No. 1267 color CRT with a single gun provides imCONRAC proved interpretation of the display. California 91722 600 N. Rimsdale Aye., The operation of the beam penetration Elton N. Sherman Tel: (213) 966-3511 CRT depends on different accelerating the traditional OEM supplier to voltages actuating different color phosindustry of Computer CRT Terminals, phors. Obviously changing colors must will display their terminals which are be made fast and often. Switching from compatible with TTY, Burroughs and red at IOkV to green at 16.5 kV into 1500 Univac communication disciplines. They Pico Farad loads in 15 usee (20,000 times will also be showing their new repro- a second) wastes power unless you congrammable 2000 character terminal serve it. available with floppy disc and printer The patented solid state CPS switching interfaces. circuits allow small size, since 90% of How to improve computer data flow throughout your organization. Learn howKodak KOM microfilmers can help you set up the data management procedures needed for the 70s. Speed was the first thing everyone noticed about putting computer tape data directly on microfilm with a COM unit. But the real COM benefits come with the better use and handling of information it makes possible. Besides cutting costs in data processing through more efficient use of existing hardware andthese savings can be very substantial indeed), the various user groups within your organization also benefit. By getting the data faster. By getting it in a more usable form— either in microfiche or roll microfilm, depending on your need. By having data easily coded for automated retrieval. All as part of the COM operation. Another important reason for choosing a Kodak KOM microfilmer is that you have Kodak's full resources in software, serv ic9; and systems support to call upon, Get the facts on COM. Write for our informative new booklet, ' 'The New Generation of Computer Output". And see how COM can benefit your organization. Eastman Kodak Company, Business Systems Markets Division, Dept. 58 1 3 ,Rochester, New York 14650. What you're saving now with microfilm is only the beginning. TJm I the switching energy is conserved. Also, the beam penetration principle has been extended to provide dual persistence display combined with dual color for radar applications. Booth No. 2263 CRU 4650 W. Ohio 44135 160th 0. C. Harder Tel: (216) 267-6400 The Capacity Meter is designed to measure utilization based on the users job stream. It supplies data for operational management and measurement specialist. Instruction manual provides data center management with the tools to; Define Capacity, Forecast utilization, establish control limits and alarms. The only COMPARATIVE LIBRARY OF PERFORMANCE standards is included. The parent company, Computer Resources, Inc. exhibits a broad line of diskettes, disk packs and System/3 alarms, the Sentry 1 3 line. Booth No. 1103 CULLINANE CORPORATION One Boston Place, Boston, Massachusetts 02108 Thomas M. Lescalleet Tel: (617) 742-8656 As an exhibitor in the 1975 National Computer Conference & Exposition, The Cullinane Corporation will feature two systems: — IDMS Integrated Database Management System A modern comprehensive computer program package for database — — management. CompreEDP-AUDITOR / CULPRIT hensive computer program packages for edp audit and information retrieval for use with all types of files. Booth No. 2321 DATA 100 CORPORATION Minneapolis, Minn. 55435 7725 Washington Aye. PaulKraska Tel: (612)941-6500 DATA 100 exhibits its new Model 76 Remote Batch Terminal, a highly low cost RJE device combining a wide range of card readers (150-1000 CPM) and line printers (210-1250 LPM) with extensive communications capabilities (up to 19.2 KBPS). Both IBM 2780 and IBM 3780 line discipline emulation are available on this terminal. The enhanced DATA 100 Keybatch II system is also exhibited. Unique editing, balancing, formatting capabilities, and comprehensive operational statistics are demonstrated. Up to eight keyboards are supported concurrent with batch mode operation while the system services up to 32 keystations when used in a stand- alone key entry mode. Booth No. 2321 DATA 100 OEM SALES (DATA 100 Subsidiary) 7725 Washington Aye. Minneapolis, Minn. 55435 Steve Shamblott Tel: (612)941-6500 DATA 100 OEM Sales exhibits its OEM product line featuring the Odec series of line printers and the Cal Data microprogrammable minicomputer products. The Odec line printer is an economical character belt printer which provides a full impact character with true speeds from 125 to 600 LPM with a common line of interfaces available. DATA 100 OEM 34 Sales will also show other OEM peripherals offering plug compatability over a wide range of models. Booth No. 2708 DATA COMMUNICATIONS 1221 Aye. of Americas, New York, New York 10020 George Werner Tel: (212) 997-3139 Data Communications magazine is published for professional people responsible for the use, planning, design, and implementation of data communications systems in business, industry, and government. Free subscriptions and sample copies available to qualified personnel. Editorial, and sales personnel will be available at the booth. Booth No. 2354 DATA DISC, INC. 686 West Maude Avenue, Sunnyvale, Calif. 94086 Bob Beese Tel: (408) 732-7330 Tape drives, disc memories, and graphic displays. Booth No. 1354, 1356 DATA ELECTRONICS INC. 370 N. Halstead Pasadena, California 91107 H. H. Georgens Tel: (213) 351-8991 Complete line of Digital Cartridge Magnetic Tape Drives including interfaces. Units are one and four track, serial and parallel recording both for commercial and military environment applications. Booth No. 1355 DATA GENERAL CORPORATION Massachusetts 01772 Route 9, Thomas Hayes Tel: (617) 485-9100 Exhibits will demonstrate Data General's extensive interactive capabilities used to support computation, data processing, communications, and process control applications. The company's new series of ECLIPSE computers and a full line of peripherals will be featured. Booth No. 1206 DATAMATION 35 Mason Connecticut 06830 James M. Morris Tel: (203) 661-5400 DATAMATION a magazine serving the users and manufacturers of data process- — ing equipment. Booth No. 1141 DATAMEDIA CORPORATION 7300 North Crescent Blvd., Pennsauken, N.J. 08110 K. E. Asquith (East), A. S. Angus (West) Tel: (609) 665-2382, (213) 397-3556 Introducing the Elite 1520A, the latest in Datamedia'sline of CRT Terminals; this unit provides most of the features required of a conversational terminal plus a full upper/lower case option. Another recent introduction is the Elite 1500P, which is a portable version of the well proven Elite 1500A"dumb" terminal. Also on display is the more sophisticated Elite 2500ACRT Terminal which features upper/lower case, protected dual intensity and blink together with text editing and other option. If Your Data Booth No. 1649, 1651 DATAPOINT CORPORATION 9725 Datapoint Drive, San Antonio, Texas Gerry Cullen Tel: (512) 690-7059 Datapoint will show several new and powerful dispersed data processing systems. For Intelligent Data Entry, the recently announced Diskette 1100 Intelligent Terminal will be demonstrated. This new computer-based terminal contains 16,000 characters of memory, keyboard, display and up to four diskette Communications Network Includes Multipoint Private Lines... bu Need To Know About Datadial.® drives. For business users with multiple loca- tions requiring computer power, the latest and most powerful version of the Business Timesharing System will be demonstrated. This system incorporates the 5500 processor, the new 25 million character mass storage disk drives and up to 16 user terminals. The DATASHARE system permits each user to run separate application programs and access separate or multiple data files. DATASHARE offers the user a means to place computing power at the locations where it's needed rather than having the data moved to the computer. Booth No. 1654, 1656 DATA PRINTER CORP. 600 Memorial Dr., Cambridge, Mass. 02139 Jerome M. Kaplan Tel: (617) 354-4700 Medium speed line printers. Booth No. 1551 DATAPRO RESEARCH CORPORATION 1805 Underwood Blvd., Delran, New Jersey 08075 J. B. Totaro Tel: (609) 764-0100 Datapro produces DATAPRO 70, DATAPRO REPORTS ON DATAPRO REPORTS ON BANKING and the new DATAPRO REPORTS ON OFFICE SYSTEMS—objective information services for the EDP and office communities. These services, the most widely used in the world, each include up-to-date reference volumes, monthly reports and interpretive newsletters, and an unlimited custom inquiry service. Every important EDP and office product, service and vendor is analyzed. Datapro also provides seminars on data processing and voice/data communica- — tions. Booth No. 2222 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST, INC. 6820 La Tijera Blvd., Los Angeles, California 90045 Gisela Use Wermke Tel: (213) 776-4334 DATA PROCESSING DIGEST is a monthly digesting service for top management and data processing management, as well as suppliers of computers Datadial is the nation's first digital switched dial-up service and offered only by DATRAN. With Datadial you will save time, money, and computer overhead if you are now polling multipoint lines. Datadial connects calls in less than one second—the instant a terminal operator touches a button. That's probably a lot faster than your computer can poll a terminal. When the terminal operator calls your computer with an inquiry, don't worry if the computer is busy with other calls. Datadial will queueup the outstanding calls and complete them automatically as fast as your computer can handle them. And, you can switch your data virtually error-free at speeds up to 9600 bps. Expanding a multipoint network usually causes problems. Other terminals may be operationally affected while adding new terminals to a line. Not so with Datadial. Every terminal has its own circuit—when it needs it and only when it needs it. You pay only when you are transmitting data. You probably think you could never afford to use a dial-up service, even if it is super-fast and accurate— not with all those transactions you must process daily. Wrong! Each 20 second transaction across 200 miles costs only one penny. And, if you have lots of transactions, the rate is even less. < Write or call: DATRAN, Data Transmission Company, 7200 N. Stemmons, Suite 300, Dallas, Texas 75247, (214) 634-7390 and related services. The editors con- tinuously search more than 200 computer, management, and trade magazines, plus many reports and information services. The best computer-related material is written into concise digests. Also includes book reviews, monthly and annual index,calendar,complete references to sources. No advertising. 12 monthly issues, Published since 1955. The Switch Is On! See Us at the ICA in San Francisco, May 12-14 Booth 151-152 and at the NCC in Anaheim May 19-22, Booth 2452-2454 DATRAN Booth No. 1260, 1262 DATARAM CORPORATION Princeton-Hightstown Road, Cranbury, N.J. 08512 John F. Gilligan Tel: (609) 799-0071 Dataram will display core memory prodStanucts: Core Memory dard and Custom Core Memory Systems, and Add-On Memories for Minicomputers. Booth No. 2617 DATA RENTALS/SALES INC. 1919 South La Cienega Boulevard Culver City, California 90230 Stewart M. Krakover Tel: (213) 559-3822 Data rentals manufactures keypunch machines for sale or rent. Also teletypes and CRT terminalsfor sale or rent. Booth No. 2265 DATA SPECIALTIES INC. 3455 CommercialAye., Northbrook, Illinois 60062 Ed Kaplan Tel: (312) 564-1800 New paper tape peripherals will fill the DSI booth. The revolutionary "EP" series tape perforators will get the spotlight. This device features a simple design, compact size, quiet operation, modularity, serviceability, extremely long life and high reliability. Stop in and see our little jewel! It's really something new and definitely worth seeing. Booth No. 2449 DATA TERMINALS & COMMUNICATIONS 1190Dell Avenue, Campbell, California 95008 Roy M. Worthington Tel: (408) 378-1112 DTC-300 Data Communications Terminal and HyWriter ROP3 Receive Only Printer. Booth No. 2652 DATATYPE CORPORATION P.O. Box 693712, Norland Branch N. Miami, Florida 33169 Keith Rueckel Tel: (305) 625-8451 Optical Page Readers which convert typewritten data at 110 eps into computer language by optical-electronic logic. Datatype readers are at affordable prices with high reliability. Booth No. 2452, 2454 DATRAN (Data Transmission Company) 8130 Boone Boulevard,Vienna, Virginia 22180 John P. Guttenberg, Jr. Tel: (703) 893-2450 ext. 194 Data communications and data transmission services. Booth No. 2316 DATUM, INC. 1363 S. State College Blvd., Anaheim, Calif. 92806 John R. Jaeckel Tel: (714) 533-6333 Ext. 212, 213 or 216 The new DATUM minicomputer will be shown with DATUM peripheral devices for most minicomputers including: interfaces and controllers for magnetic tape recorders, disk and drum systems; digital cassette systems; plus scientific and commercial software and software consultation. Booth No. 2320 DECISION DATA COMPUTER CORPORATION 100 Witmer Road, Horsham, Pennsylvania 19044 Richard L. Schwab Tel: (215) 674-3300 Decision Data will exhibit a broad range of data entry, data communications and 36 peripheral products for both 80 and 96 column punched cards. Demonstrations of the CS 200 Data Communication System, a remote batch system with hardcopy printer and auto-answer options, will highlight the booth which will also display high-performance card data recorders and several unique card peripherals. Fact sheets on all products in Decision Data's comprehensive line up of 80 and 96 column card equipment able. will be avail- Booth No. 2647 DECITEK— A DIVISION OF JAMESBURY CORP. 250 Chandler Worcester, Massachusetts 01602 Harry o'Donoghue Tel: (617) 798-8731 DECITEK Precision Punched Tape Readers feature high-reliability photoelectric reading system; synchronized dualsprocket drive; fan fold or spooling system for tape handling; 100, 150, 300, 600 CPS models. Booth No. 1458, 1460 DELTA DATA SYSTEMS CORP. Woodhaven IndustrialPark Cornwells Heights, Pennsylvania Paul Freeman Tel: (215) 639-9400 DELTA DATA SYSTEMS will introduce the DELTA 4000, a micro programmable video display terminalfeaturing the company's patented PAGING variable buffered memory. Also on display will be a new text editing system designed for local or on-line text preparation and manipulation. The system is comprised of a video display terminal, MultiTerm 2 Controller and hard copy and tape cassette terminals. The company will also exhibit the DELTA 5000 APL, a video display terminal with full APL and ASCII charactersets, overstrike capability, complete editing functions and PAGING memory. Booth No. 1744 DELTAK, INC. 9950 West Lawrence Avenue Schiller Park, Illinois 60176 Peter W. Dlgnan Tel: (31 2) 671 -5300 Multi-Media (video, audio, text) training library for Analysts, Programmers, Operators, Users and Management. Programmer Productivity Series featuring Ed Yourdon and Larry Constantine will be available for review. Booth No. 2555 DELTEC CORP. 980 Buenos Avenue, San Diego, California 92110 R. Dale Scott Tel: (714) 297-4466 Complete line of power-conditioning equipment in the low to medium-power range for solution of all levels of AC power problems in computer equipment. Equipment eliminates crashes, errors, lost data, garbled output due to power blackouts, brownouts and line transients such as millisecond-duration, voltage spikes and dips. Product Line includes : Super-Isolation Transformers 250 VA to 5000 VA Line-Conditioners 1200 VA to 5000 VA — — Static DC/AC Inverters—3oo VA to 10KVA Uninterruptible Power Systems 700 VA to 35 KVA — Millions of bits for just a few bucks. Booth No. 2643 DESIGN INC. 1748 Woodwind Lane,Anaheim, California 92807 Roger Rutman Tel: (714) 993-1160 Drafting System 1, a non-gridded computer drafting system for electrical schematics and chemical process drawings. Input is a freehand sketch, not a laid-out drawing. The system does the layout automatically. All other systems require that the sketch first be layed out on a grid. The system will also output a list of connections which can be used to drive design automation programs such as wire wrap and printed circuit design. 3ooth No. 1461 DIABLO SYSTEMS INC. 24500 Industrial Blvd., Hayward, California 94545 Charles Kotsaftis Tel: (415) 783-3910 The Diablo exhibit will feature the new Model 300 Disk Drive, 200 TPI, 4600 BPI, 10 megabyte, removable 2315 cartridge and the new HyType 11, an advanced version of the HyType I, 30 serial impact printer. The exhibit will also have the Model 12 Floppy Disk Drive, Model 24 Disk Drive, 200 TPI, 5 megabyte, 2315 media and the Model 44 Disk Drive, 200 TPI, 10 megabyte, 5540 removable cartridge plus one fixed media. Booth No. 1119 DI-AN CONTROLS, INC. 944 Corchester Aye., Boston, Massachusetts 02125 Jr. Tel: (617) 288-7700 Herman R. Ticket/Tag/ Label Printers: Reliable highspeed, computer driven, industrial quality printers for the Airlines, On and Off-Track Betting, Entertainment, Warehousing, Manufacturing, Newspaper and Transportation Industries. Three of the printers accept fan-folded or roll stocks and produce discretedocuments with the fourth printer accepting hand-inserted documents or stringed tags. Teleprinter: Reliable, dot-matrix, impact printer for the Data Processing and Communications Industries. Booth No. 1139 DIGI-DATA CORP. 8580 Dorsey Run Road, Jessup, Maryland 20794 Roger J. Pedersen Tel: (301) 498-0200 Digital Magnetic Tape Transports and Magnetic Tape Systems including minicomputer interfaces for PDP-8, PDP-11, DCC-1 16,and HP2IOO computers. Booth No. 1468 DIGI-LOG SYSTEMS, INC. Babylon Road, Horsham, Pennsylvania 19044 Barry M. Williams Tel: (215)672-0800 Portable desktop CRT terminals designed to be fully interchangeable with Model 33 Teletypes; low-costreceive-only terminals capable of providing multiple video displays; diagnostic data line monitors for system fault isolation and debugging; MICROTERM intelligent microprogrammable CRT terminalsfor custom applications. Booth No. 1665 DIGITAL ASSOCIATES CORP. Darlen, Conn. 06820 24 Old Kings Highway John A. W. Richardson Tel: (203) 655-7606 Line printers, floppy disc systems and card readers with interfaces for popular minicomputers and System/3. 1 i DDC Systems 60 & 90 are self-contained head-per-track disc memory units, complete with all required read-write electronics. The disc units are plug compatible with existing interface controllers for DDC disc products. A highly reliable disc— the system ran the equivalent of 14 years of start-stop-start operation with no wear or reduction in reliability. Systems 60 & 90: high performance at a very attractive price. DIGITAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION 8615 Balboa Avenue, San Diego, CA 92123 Phone: (714) 278-9920 / TELEX U.S. 69-54-30 Middlesex, England Radix House, Phone: Staines 51444 / TELEX 93-50-23 INTERSHAKE tests your DATA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM MkP thp iyaIBIII lICPC HUB "Ie CVCtpm USeS itl It! tm m ■ I I ■■■mbjb^^^^^B ories, microprocessors) Also to be shown, a new magazine, Electronics In Industry Electronic technology for the non-elec lead-per-track disc systems consisting of Data General Nova Controller and and disc memory, and DDC System 60 w-cost disc memory. Booth No. 1249 EDP NEWS SERVICES Mark Mougel Tel: (714) 278-9920 Booth No. 1342,1344, 1346, 1!1348 DOCUMATION INCORPORATED Melbourne, Florida 1240,Melbourne, P.O. Box 1240, Floi 32901 724-1 Ext. 123 Ken Nelson Tel: (305) 724-1111 Documation will be exhibiting e> a complete plete line of 80 column column card readers in models, operboth both table top and console cons ating at speeds of 220 to t 1200 cards per minute. In addition addition to the card readers we will also show our model PIOO card punch which is capable of punching 80 columns at a speed of 100 cards per minute. New products that will be displayed include a large capacity card reader (6000 cards) with a reading speed of 1200 cards per minute, and a multi-function 80 column card processing unit designated as model LCSO. This unit will read cards at 300 CPM and punch at 50 CPM. WITH INTERSHAKE, YOU CAN TEST AND/OR SIMULATE ANY OR ALL COMPONENTS OF THE DATA COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK THE WAY THEY ARE USED IN THE GOING ON-LINE? Intershake simulates software protocol. You can bring the system up, without using computer time (and without being bumped for priority work). Fewer interruptions mean quicker cutover. SYSTEM DOWN? Intershake tests all the system not just some. Check modems, transmission errors, EIA interface with one instrument. Intershake will catch an intermittent problem even count the number of times it occurs. Find problems . .. quicker. Our canned tests make INTERSHAKE quick and easy to use. Our built-in library of 60 different test functions allow the more demanding user to build his own tests from the front panel for ANY protocol. INTERSHAKE TELLS IT LIKE IT IS! Care to learn more? Write or call us today: & ATLANTIC RESEARCH CORPORATION 5390 AVENUE ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA 22314 703-354-3400 . Booth No. 1100 DIGITAL DEVELOPMENT CORP. 5575 Kearny Villa Road, San Diego, Calif. 92123 It also has read before punch, read after punch, interpret and printing capabilities. Booth No. 1257, 1259 7620 Little River Turnpike, Annandale, Va. 22003 Alfred E. Lewis 111 Tel: (703) 354-9400 EDP News Services publishes five newsletters for the computer industry: EDP Daily, offering EDP news five days a week; EDP Weekly, which summarizes the week's computer events in all areas, including contracts, government activities, legislation, new products, antitrust suits, procurement actions, financial statements, new literature, etc.; Peripherals Weekly, which reports on happenings in the peripherals sector of the computer industry; Software Digest, a weekly report on computer programs, programming, software patentability, legislation and others; and Computer Age, a digest of international computer news. Booth No. 1359, 1361, 1363 EDPAC— A C MANUFACTURING COMPANY Old Cuthbert & Deer Rds., Cherry Hill, N.J. 08034 N. Keith Betler Tel: (609) 428-9800, Ext. 40 Process Cooling Systems for Computer Rooms. DOUGLAS ELECTRONICS 718 Marina Blvd., San Leandro, California 94577 Chad Pennebaker Tel: (415) 483-8770 Printed circuit boards, connectors, racks, cases, ejectors, IC sockets, computer interface breadboards, computer peripheral devices, DEC PDP 8/e interface equip32 column printer and terminal. Booth No. 1121, 1123 E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS & CO. 9 Germay Drive, Wilmington, Delaware 19898 Lewis G. Kirk Tel: (302) 774-7381 1 ) Puts out fire faster than any other 2) Reduces costly damage due met method. to fire or extinguishant or both. 3) Ideal protection for computers. 4) Safe to personnel for brief exposures. 5) Harmless to property. 6) Leaves no residue. 7) Electrically nonconductive. 8) Noncorrosive. 9) Reduces costly business interruption. 10) Reduces loss of irreplaceable records or high value equipment. Booth No. 2417 EASTMAN KODAK Business Systems Markets Division 343 State Rochester, New York 14650 LeeHorschman Tel: (716) 325-2000 The Kodak exhibit has been designed to show the role microphotography plays in the "information flow" of any organization. Besides a display of its latest micrographic products and COM capability, Kodak will show three new films designed for computer output microfilmers. The fact that Kodak can provide comprehensive software support will also be given special mention within the exhibit. Booth No. 1365 EDN MAGAZINE 221 Columbus Aye., Boston, Massachusetts 02116 Roy Forsberg Tel: (617) 536-7780 Ext. 337 EDN magazine For designers and design managers in electronics (including — computers, computer — tronic engineering peripherals, mem- Booth No. 2257, 2259, 2261 EECO 1441 E. Chestnut Aye., Santa Ana, California 92701 D. H. Hall Tel: (714) 835-6000 Punched Tape Readers and Perforators. Electronic Packaging Hardware: wirewrap cards and boards, panels, swingouts and drawers. Wiring and Documentation service. Rotary Thumbwheel Switches and P.C. Board mounting switches. Booth No. 2440. 2444 ELECTRONIC MEMORIES & MAGNETICS CORPORATION 12621 Chadron Aye., Hawthorne, California 90250 Matt Stein Tel: (213) 644-9881 A full line of core and NMOS memory systems, mini computer add-on memory, IBM-compatible memory, and IK and 4K static NMOS ROM and RAM components will be exhibited. Disk drives, packs and cartridges will also be displayed. Booth No. 1301, 1302 ELECTRONIC NEWS New York, New York 10003 Martin P. Rosenblum Tel: (212) 741-4356 Every week, ELECTRONIC NEWS reports up-to-the-minute news of the computer, peripheral equipment, data communications and electronics industries. 7 East 12th Booth No. 1658. 1662 EMCOR—INGERSOLL PRODUCTS Chicago, Illinois 60643 1000 West 120th Gary P. Ellis Tel: (312) 264-7800 Modular Enclosure Systems, Three Standard Product Lines to choose from. Modified Specials, and Custom Units which are designed to your specifications. A New Line of Computer Support Furniture. Also, component items such as drawers, doors and panels; hardware items including handles, hinges and paint; aluminum ball-bearing slides and slim slides. Anyone of our competitor's page printers can print Ramada Inn'sreservations. And someof them can do it faster than ours. But Ramada Inn chose our -4553 that operatesat 15 ch/s. Because what we don't offer in speed, we offer in reliability. Which makes this specific machine perfect for their needs. But if you need somethingfaster, We also offer our 4554 that operates at 60 ch/s. Both machines are of rela- tively simpledesign and very inexpensive. Also, neither machine requires a ribbon when theyprint information. Our use of helix and hammer design to form the 5 x 7 dot matrix produces an extremely clear and At Facit, we put a lot of work into our machines so you can get a lot of work out of them. The Facit 4553 and 4554— we don't have any reservations about them. For more information, justwriteto Facit—O.E.M. Division, 501 Winsor Drive, easy-to-readprint out. New Jersey 07094. And we're even easy to interface. The Facit 4553 and 4554 are gr~rmi obtainable for bit parallel h« |"TJ" (USASC II) data transmission and k«-UI serial data transmission Dedicated to Efficiency W^M\MT^. Booth No. 1128 EX-CELL-0 (Remex) P. 0. Box 386, Detroit, Michigan 48225 wW. cC. Kirchhoff Tel: (313) 868-3900 868-3900 ■ *Ua fS\j*\ Ctr Iff V? Booth No 2246 2248 cvtci rnDDnoA-rinu EXTEL CORPORATION 1.1,...;.."„ „.I niO Cf tf \AfC± -11 W t?5 f T I" TO CIIO MI I y" #Mf>«»AUA COSSGT T■ G W, W M^l* r(*Cfl tfl Ifl *Tf I VVVIUIIIU __- r*+ m. M I Illinois 60062 arnnld l.rnh. Tel (312) 979 BMn Arnold Jacobs 272-8650 teleprinter product xtel consist?m S of| smalL <3ulet simple,line, reliable im' | V^*«*«*Wa M 310 Anthony " f ffl ff |« Booth No. W ■ primers ana teletypewriters. Booth No. 14 N 1124 |N CORPORATED FABm FABRI-TEK TEK INCORPORATED 5901 So. Country Rd. 18. Minneapolis, Minn. 55436 Cheryl Manthey Tel:A„ (612)'„* 935-8811, r"' Core memory stacks and systems, Minicomputer Add-On Memories, Extension memories for IBM and Univac Com- Sso'cVuSSmMinneapolls, ' „♦ o„ P^ers,, microcomputers, microprocessors, 1. IIIIL 1 L Replacement memories for and Drum Replacement GE/PAC 4010 and 4020 computers, Cache Buffer for PDPI I/45. 1/45. Booth No. 2734, 2736, 2738 INC. 501 Winsor Drive, Secaucus, New Jersey Douglas H. Emore Tel: (201) 866-5111 Dnnlh Un 9704 97« 9700 — OEM EQUIPMENT I/O Typewriters, pe punches, pi ape tape readers, spoolers and rpnrndnppTC tape reproducers, nnmpnV numeric printers, strip printers, page printers, key readers, I/O adding machines and cassette tape units. anp nTinto-rc rnirnm ctrm nu> c CoN"°.'. !-....... .. . .. 99 Wall Street, Valha la New York 10595 mdd.uh George A. Tel: (914) 761-2600 Inductosyn® Position Measuring Trans- _ ducers for . „ Discs, „. Disc Drive, Flexible Printers and other Computer Peripheral k pyVptatpn . . . * numeric key pad accesA compact Will operate with With a data sory, sory, that will terminal. Features terminal. Features include include multimulticharacter key programing and buffering of all keyed data. — Equipment. Booth No. 1643 FLOAT|NG FLOATING pO|NT POINT SYSTEMS m INC. 105205.W. Cascade Blvd., Portland, Oregon 97223 Douglas I. Haines Tel: (503) 620-1980 High-speed Floating-Point, and Array vi — r^ " S^^T" " ° **' "* A printing electronic calculator poiiinriPfi equipped with tk rpmrHpr wun a rassettP cassene recorder. m a^w The AddVerterenables convemen ♦ data collection with a by-product tape. Cassettes may be transmitted by phone to your service bureau. Booth No. 1339 GENERAL INC 4883, 1055 s East P.O. Box ■ Anaheim, California 92803 ' pau| Ejsn er Te|; m New data management systems provid- - :_ »_■» M _ ing capabilities ranging stations and from RJE worksatellite processors, to com- V-Vl-■- -V*»riir»lllslt» ~ " central processing facilities are featured. Also on display are new highspeed speed , minicomputers and. memories; a . . new e\v design microcomputer; new com- Captures data on cassette tape in computer format at point of sale. terns such as the new General Automation Diebonder and Adapt-A-Path. CHlly Mltll POS Has internal calculator with operator programed Keyboard. tf m) INTERNATIONAL COMPUTER PRODUCTS INC. 2925 Merrell Road Dallas, Texas 75229 plete ations products, including an RJE tern; and industrial automation sys- S^i.Snn^SS^ Automirion °nentatlon °f GenCTal Booth No. 1567, 1565,1467 GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY— DATA COMMUNICATION PRODUCTS DEPT. General Electric Drive, Waynesboro, Virginia 22980 C F - Rockwell C.- F. Rockwell Tel: (703) 942-8161, ext. 188 Full line of TermiNet* high speed data teleprinters for use in a wide variety of applications. Configurations available in both character and line printers and speial options can be added. _ bits Th iPfP mnsf ,hne inP See the full line of COMPLOT" products at the NCC, Booth No. 271 7 ° I nf HpqH Head pi Track Disk Memories available today. . "« SZ?!' UUn, «,„ PnDnnD ,„u H c °- TECHNOLOGY « "mu»Y CORPORATION 'f icV R „„,hN„ N M 13M ,„ TTJT "? 8435 Susana 1843 California 90221 ° Road Compton T on L« TTurner Tel: Les Tel: (213) 537-4750 An operating Model ECR-10 Digital Mag e C trldg Re c rd netlc f The ,Model u shown fECR-1C, d cer wIU be , ' - *_, - magnetic offers a new low magnetic low cost qualified, c recording capability for severe enDe enf^ High High vironments. ronrne ts The Model 10-286 V3 Density Digital Magnetic Tape Recorder/ Recorder/ Reproducer will also be- shown. This rugged, reliable compact unit can record gl3) T^ , " " -. 2 and * —ill ° K" l playback up to ips ml 20 tracks at bits per inch on 1 inch wide in severe environmen tape at 120 - tJOOW NO. v l&uu ■"" " DATA COMPANY GLASER 225 Forest Avenue Pal Al, California 94302 °- 321-1348 Geoffrey C. Ziman ' Tel: (415) The Glaser DP- 1500 Computer Graphic ° Output Plotter can be used with any programmable calculator, minicomputer, data proces sor, memory device or modem to produce accurate graphic output. The microprocessor greatly simplifies built-in Dunt-in mi software rrequirements. The Plotter has both line drawing and character generation capability. It is ruggedly built and maintenance-free. There is an optional paper advance Plotting are ice available. available. Plotting area sizes are either 17.5" x 22.5" or 24" x 34". The DP-6000 Logic Counter Probe will be show Proi /VCICI 1 ape 1466 GENERAL INSTRUMENT CORF SYSTEMATICS DIVISION 13040 S. Cerise Aye., Hawthorne, Hawthoi California 90250 13040S. (213) 973" 1741 ext 25 Georfle D ' RimS ' 166 mod ks and 3 d Systems Memory Disks Three modead per Track e of Head els T Disk Memories £j* Model 50 FR 2to 18 me gabitS; Mode! ' 300 Ito g megabit MMm Model 530 tarized and Ruggedized) 16 to 80 „ lilCXAfl /VC VV ! Time Sharing Plotter Controller Booth No. 1746, 1748, 1750 INSTRUMENT SYSTEMS DIVISION Perkins Avenue, Ohio 44114 GOULD 3631 Peter Highberg Tel: (216) 361-3315 Model 5200 Electrostatic Printer/ Plotter that has a resolution of 200 vertically and horizontally for more detailed plotting (0.2 percent accuracy) of scientific and engineering drawings formerry requiring a drum plotter. Both Helvetica and Times Roman type fonts are available for alphanumeric printing Output speed is 1.65 ips, printing speed is 650 character lines per minute, paper width is 11 inche P»tor uinhh.m ,« oiki PTC-5 Universal any COMPLOT Digital Plotter " Drives plotting " Error-free Firmware character and vector generation " Circular buffering system " Low cost " f GRAPHIc'cOHTHOLS RECORDING CHART DIVISION 189 Van Rensselaer New York 14210 RayNewstead Tel: (716) 853-7500 ELECTROSTATIC CHART PAPER man ufactured to fit Varian, Versatec and Gould plotters. In two grades; high conreport grade and diazo-reproducible diazo-reproducible trast trast report translucent. Fan-fold packs have sequen tial page numbering for quick reference. Paper stocked for immediate delivery. Shelf life guaranteed for three years, under normal conditions. PLOTTER NtZW! Digital Plotter Up to 50% faster; now up to 450 steps per second Operates online, offline, time sharing and remote batch Still only $3550. MTR ssees"es KIC\Ail IMC VV ! Phase Encoded Magnetic Tape/Controller 1600 CPI Phase Encoded Format MTR-3/9-PE $16,750. MTR-4/9-PE $19,950. " " PLUS. .. DP-3, a 22" wide, 400 $5150. steps per second Digital Plotter DP-7, a full 36.5" wide, 1800 steps per second Digital Plotter — $13,500. DP-10, a flat bed X-Y Incremental Plotter, 8 $21.50 (for minimum order of vector format 10 units) Tape Reader, 7 or 9 track, MTR-4 Magnetic IV $15,500. 800 CPI, automatic block search BTC-7 Series Batch Terminal Controller from $1950. — — Write for details today Cameron Road) Pick a winner for 1975! Ln]CQ)CLa©lg©LrD inSTrUmeilT DIVISION OF pffinpDED COMPANY MUSCH&LOMI® — ME ONE HOUSTON - SQUARE (at (at 8500 9: <512)837 2820 European TWxX reco P^ 91 B 2o22 TEXAS 78753 c-*ho.noo >Pi ?£^r!"XZ%7n» Belgium 6 8240 omcE Rochesterlaan Phone 059 277445 Telex Bausch 1939E f\ registered trademark Houstc - CHARTS— to fit X-Y Plotters and drum plotters. In addition to translucent paper, rag bond, vellum, triacetate and mylar are available. Special grids made to your specifications. Booth No. 2448. 2550 HAMILTON INC. 1126 Algonquin Road 3K, Schaumburg, Chicago, Illinois 60172 Tom Hamilton Tel: (312) 397-7878 PortableTypewriter/Tape/Phone Coupler Systems. Word Processing Typewriter Systems with Communication Options. Data Transmissions Receiving Systems, such as Printers, Punches. Booth No. 1317 HARRIS CORP. (Data Communications div., Computer Systems div. & PRD Electronics div.) 55 Public Square, Ohio 44113 H.T. Eckhardt Tel: (216) 861-7900 On display will be a Cope 1600 remote communications processor with multitask capabilities; two Harris Slash Four medium scale computer systems; and a Harris Laserfax facsimile transmission system. Also represented will be the Harris time-sharing and software capabilities. Booth No. 1437 HEWLETT-PACKARD 11000 Wolfe Road, Cupertino, California 95014 Jerry Costanzo Tel: (408) 257-7000 ext. 2563 Hewlet-Packard demonstrates the latest in its new line of 21MX minicomputers, featuring semiconductor 4K RAM memory at new low prices and new, fast disc facilities. HP's 3000 Mini DataCenter and new 2000 system offer distributed access and multi-terminal exchanges of operating data for manufacturing, engineering, education, and other applications. Terminal users get hands-on experience with HP's outstanding new self-test CRT terminals. Smart 4K RAM memory, 1 displays of unprecedented clarity, micro-processor control, plug-in character sets and pop-in, pop-out modularity set the new standard of excellence in the industry. Be sure to see HP. Booth No. 2717 HOUSTON INSTRUMENT 8500 Cameron Road, Austin, Texas 78753 Winston A. Kriger Tel: (512) 837-2820 All models in the COMPLOT line of dig- ital-incremental plotters will be demonstrated including the recently upgraded DP-1 (11" width), the DP-3 (22" width), and the DP-7 (36" width). The "MTR" series of magnetic tape readers/controllers will be used for demonstrating off-line plotter application (MTR-3 and MTR-4), and on-line usage will be demonstrated using a popular minicomputer. A new 1600 CPI (Phase Encoded Format) version of the "MTR" series will be introduced. — i Booth No. 1663 HUGHES AIRCRAFT CONOGRAPHIC PRODUCTS P.O. Box 1009, 6855 El Camlno Real, Carlsbad, California 92008 Patrick M. Clark Tel: (714) 729-9191 Hughes offers the Conographic" Graphic Display Terminal as its major entry into 42 the computer peripheral field. Conography features proprietary curve generating graphics and alphanumerics by specifying slope and end-point information to its digital hardware. Accordingly, Conography substantiallyreduces the amount of data required for computation and transmission. The Conographic Terminal gent computer terminal system with an SPD-D 250 floppy diskette for data storage. Incoterm also intends to demonstrate its Remote Batch Terminal System which includes the SPD 10/20 intelligent computer terminal along with various periph- can support a host of computer types, as well as a library of software support. eral options. Booth No. 2165 Booth No. 2710 c/o Clapp & Poliak HYDRA CORP. 2218 Old Middlefield Way, Mountain View, California 94043 William C. Bennett Tel: (415) 964-9135 HYDRA Corporation will exhibit and demonstrate its new nine wire matrix printercapable of printing synchronously at 180 eps bidirectionally or asynchronously for use with keyboard input. The printer features a new print head concept that provides extremely high reliability and continuous operation. Head adjustment is not required for printing of one to six part allowing use of single copy journal record along with multiple copy forms. Dual tractors will also be demonstrated. Booth No. 2429 IBM CORPORATION Old Orchard Road, Armonk, New York 10154 John Barton Tel: (914) 765-6418 Data processing products and services. Booth No. 1505 ICC/MILGO Miami, Florida 33125 8600 N.W. 4 Richard N. Nathanson Tel: (305) 592-7654 ICC/Milgo will display a full line of modems operating at speeds from 2000 bps to 9600 bps. The exhibit will feature a demonstration of the ICC 40+ Data Display System. Other new products to be shown include Modem 96 Multi-mode and the Comstore data storage buffer. Qualified ICC data communication personnel will be in attendance for consultation. Booth No. 2119, 2121, 2123, 2125 IMLAC CORP. Needham, Massachusetts 02194 150 A Hiram T. French Tel: (617) 449-4600 IMLAC will be displaying two Interactive Graphic Display Systems. The new low cost PDS-1G which provides an intelligent graphics display terminal with fully programmable mini-computer at a very low cost. The second system is the powerful new PDS-4 Interactive Graphics Display System complete with mini-computer and 2D image manipulation hardware. Applications where these systems are currently being utilized include: process control, simulation, biomedical, clothing pattern cutting, optimization, piping design, and many others. Booth No. 1157, 1159 INCOTERM CORP. 6 Strathmore Road, Natlck, Massachusetts 01760 Barry Godowsky Tel: (617) 655-6100 Incoterm Corporation will feature a new Data Entry package, called Incoform. The new software will be operating on Incoterm's standard SPD 20/20 intelli- We've made electrostatic writing beautiful. INFO 75 245 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10017 H. G.Asmus Tel: (212) 661-8410 Conference Program material for INFO 75 scheduled for September 8 thru 11 at the New York Coliseum. Booth No. 1513 INFOREX, INC. Burlington, Massachusetts 01803 21 North Richard Lorlgan Tel: (617) 272-6470 The Inforex System 5000 represents a new approach to file management. The rapid-access system large, data base storage capabilities normally found in large computer systems, but without the extensive systems/applications programming efforts and long lead times typically required to establish such capabilities. System 5000 requires no special site planning or programming. Operator needs no special training and as many as 32 operators can use it simultaneously each doing a different clerical job. Stores 140 files containing one million averagesize records. Includes minicomputer, built-in tape drive, disc storage, and terminal with CRT screen and keyboard. — Users untrained in computer technology can be working with live data files in a matter of days after a System is installed. Simple two-lettercommands enable multiple users to simultaneously create, retrieve, expand and update files from local or remote terminals. Paper copy capabilities are available to capture the file image shown on each terminal's display screen. System 3300, a multistation sharedprocessor, data entry system with substantially increased processing power capable of imposing the most sophisticated editing upon incoming data. Low-cost Magnetic "180" line printer for the OEM market. Booth No. 2456, 2458 INFORMATION TERMINALS CORPORATION 323 Soquel Way, Sunnyvale, California 94086 Carl Holder Tel: (408) 245-4400 Specialized magnetic data storage media digital cassettes, flexible disks, wordprocessing cassettes, diskettes and magnetic cards; test instruments, miniaturized cassette storage systems. Booth No. 1722 INFORMER, INC. 2218 Cotner Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90064 Phil Friedman Tel: (213) 477-4216 INFORMER will be introducing an extension of its range of pollable mini-CRT terminals. Shown in operation will be rack mount and desk top inquiry versions of a polled block mode controller. This will be of particular interest to industrial and process control systems suppliers to — In 1971 Versatec in- prices start at just $4,500, and printer/ plotters at $5,900. troduced the first 500 LPM printer/ plotter for under Our Universal Versaplot Software is the most powerful ever designed for $8,000. "Beautiful, said the computer pro grammer. electrostatic plot- "Beautiful:' said the OEM. "Not so beauti ful',' said critics who nmmmmmnmmnmm didn't like the 7 x 9 mmff?mmm&mwzmw dot matrix, 100 dots dot dots yy^y ;rrrg rtr^ TTTTT matrix, IUU «w» 55555 ggg per inch printout :::::: !J^j |||| 55555: that put "spots" be- Y/AA/. Tan SSS Mill wh &s§s« tec turned a corner All this is part of a very handsome package. Our printer just $900. We have controllers for over 30 computers. Now add the fact that Versatec has the broadest trostatics, the highest resolutions (160 and 200 points per inch), and the largest installed base-more than 2,500 units operating world wide, '^^^^^^^ with high resolution printout: 160 dots per inch. And then-in 1974-we found a way to make the writing bolder, blacker, and even more beautiful at 200 dots per inch. We call our new technique high resolution Dual Array Writing. It gets rid of the "dot look" by overlapping the dots. Samples are shown above. 600 LPM printers are nows4>so(X ting and starts at It's all around. It's aa beautiful beautiful story story all around. For details concerning on-line or offline operation on your computer system contact Versatec, Inc., 10100 Bubb Road, Cupertino, Calif. 95014. Or phone (408) 257-9900. TWX 910-338-0243. SS VERSATEC The leader in electrostatic writing. i industry, business and commercial institutions. Also INFORMER will be showing some new enhancements and peripherals to their existing line. Booth No. 1312 INTERDYNE COMPANY 14761 Califa Street, Van Nuys, California 91411 Bill Geist or Steve Jansson Tel: (213) 787-6800 Booth No. 1116 provides versatility, compactness, storability, handling ease, and economy of digital magnetic cassette tape media by plugging directly into any device having EIA compatible input/output signal in- INTERFACED CASSETTE SYSTEM INFOSYSTEMS MAGAZINE/HITCHCOCK PUBLISHING COMPANY Hitchcock Building, Wheaton, Illinois 60187 Robert F. Dimond Tel: (312) 665-1000 INFOSYSTEMS ... The Systems Magazine for Management is targeted editorially for management people responsiblefor the efficiency and profitability of computer-based information processing systems and data communications systems in industry, data processing services, government, retailing, education and other organizations commercial and private. ... Booth No. 2740, 2742 INNOVEX CORP. 75 Wiggins Avenue, Massachusetts 01730 Kurt Dexter Tel: (617) 275-2110 Innovex Corporation will exhibit the Series 200 Floppy Disk Drives. The Series 200 drives are IBM compatible and are offered in both soft and hard sectored models. The Model 210 and the Model 220 respectively. Booth No. 2256 INTEL CORP. 3065 Bowers Avenue, Santa California 95051 Connie Magne/Dave Guzeman Tel: (408) 246-7501 Intel's Memory Systems Division will feature their new in-30 and in-40 memory systems as well as numerous 4K custom memory systems featuring Intel's 4K dynamic RAM. Also displayed will be addon memory for IBM's 370/145 using Intel's own advanced and solid state devices. The world's largest supplier of microcomputers and microcomputer design aids will announce a new concept in microcomputer design support, the INTELLEC MDC Microcomputer Design Center. , This modular, expandable system will make it easier than ever before to do hardware and software development for microcomputer-based products. Intel will also feature its complete line of microcomputer chip families and modules, from the low cost MCS-40 to the high performance series 3000 bipolar microcomputer including the world's most popular 8-bit microcomputers, the MCS-8 — and the MCS-80. Booth No. 2337 INTERDATA, INC. 2 Crescent Place, Oceanport, New Jersey 07757 David Mullin/Diane Lanzone Tel: (201) 229-4040, ext. 442 or 396 Minicomputer Interdata, Inc., will display, in addition to it's compatible 16-bit Model 7/16 and 32-bit Model 7/32 minicomputers, the recently announced 30cps serial impact printer, the Carousel. Named for its print cup, the Carousel rivals the IBM Selectric for print quality and is the first printer to combine integral microprosser control with digital stepper motors for high quality, camera-ready production. 44 terface. Information storage is — accom- plished using heavy duty IC 2000 SERIES CASSETTE TAPE DRIVES. These rugged drives feature ECMA/ANSI compatibility, bi-directional servo capstan drive, and complete cassette interchangeability. Also displayed: OEM applications of IC 2000 Series Drives like calculator systems, terminals and program loaders. DIGITAL Booth No. 2502 INTERNATIONAL DATA CORP. 214 Third Avenue, Waltham, Massachusetts 02154 Marvin Goldberg Tel: (617) 890-3700 International Data Corporation, consulting and publishing company for the computer industry, will provide information on their many services which include EDP Corporate Planning Information Industry Investors' Research Service, Custom (Proprietary) Consulting, Industry Application and Market Audits. IDC will also feature their U.S. and International Computer Installation Files and show how they are continually updated. IDC will display their complete range of newsletters: EDP Industry Report, EDP Europa Report, EDP japan Report, and AUTOTRANSACTION. \ Booth No. 1316 INTERNATIONAL MATHEMATICAL & STATISTICAL LIBRARIES Booth No. 2360 INTERFACE INC. 10500 Kahlmeyer Drive, St. Louis, Missouri 63132 Michael E. Smith Tel: (314) 426-6880 A complete line of data entry terminals for remote and local data entry applications. Terminals to be displayed include: 1. Model 736 19-key desktop terminal that features LED display, guidance indicators and complete ASCII compatibility (RS232C or current loop). Options are available to customize the — terminal for a dedicated application. 2. Model 720 and Model 722—12 and 16 key portable battery operated Touch- Tone* data entry terminals. 3. Model 731 16-key desktop TouchTone* terminal that features LED display and built-in amplifier for audio response feedback. — Booth No. 1264 INTERMEC 5503 232nd S.W. Mountlake Terrace, Wash. 98043 R. R. Dilling Tel: (206) 774-3511 Bar code tag and label printers and the Intermec RUBY WAND light pen will be displayed. Intermec is a leader in thefield of keyboard and computer input bar code printers. Booth personnel will be available to discuss bar code applications for standard or custom designed codes. Booth No. 1133 INTERNATIONAL COMPUTER INC. 2925 Merrell Road, Dallas, Texas 75229 Gary Rocky— Tel: (214) 350-6951 ICP provides both high and low speed communicationsrecorders utilizing mag- netic tape cassettes. TermiCette is a data terminal memory unit providing data communications systems with versatility, economy, speed and convenience of cassette recording. Available as OEM are the PI-70 and PI-72 magnetic tape transports with edit and correct capabilities. Also, the PI-71, a wide environmentallow power portable battery operated cassette transport. Available now is the new V-71, an all weathermobile POS with an internal calculator and entry display with optional hard copy. 6th Floor—GNß Bldg 7500 Bellaire Boulevard,Houston, Texas 77036 L. L. Williams Tel: (713) 772-1927 IMSL will feature its mathematical and software products. IMSL leases five subroutine Libraries: IBM 360/370 Series, Xerox, Univac 1100 HIS CDC Cyber 70/6000 Series. The libraries are sets of computational kernals in spanning mathematics and statistics. The libraries are useful to any organization doing scientific programming in FORTRAN. Telephone consultations on usage and augmentation and improvement are unique user benefits. Booth No. 2117 KENNEDY COMPANY 540 W. Woodbury Road, Altadena, California91303 Russell E. Bartholomew Tel: (213) 798-0953 The most complete line of low cost tape transports is available today. Topped by the new Model 9100, 75 ips vacuum column unit. Featuring the 9000 Series tape transports with speeds from 10-45 ips and densities from 200 bpi to 1600 bpi. Includes dual density 800/ 1600 cpi operation. Also featured are the most complete line of buffered and incremental transports in extance. The famous Kennedy Model 1600. The !/4" cartridge driveModel 330 with OEM mini drive—Model 331, fully formatted system components Model 4000 and drives interfaced to the popular mini computers are also displayed. — Booth No. 2563 KERONIX, INC. 1752 Colverfield Blvd., Santa Monica, Calif. 90404 George Foldavry Tel: (213) 826-3594 Keronix, Inc. manufactures and markets digital computer systems, peripherals, and plug-compatible memory products. Being exhibited are the recently introduced IDS-16 minicomputers four 16-bit models with up to 65K words of directly accessible memory. A series of new peripherals will be shown which includes an input/output board, multi-communicators, adaptor, Bchannel multiplexer, disk and tape con- — trollers. More than a dozen plug-compatible memories for virtually all major minicomputers will also be displayed. for lull write OEM LittOD or call PRODUCTS DIVISION SWEDA INTERNATIONAL 34 Maple Avenue. Pine Brook. N.J. 07058/(201) 575-8100 IN U.K. -LBS. 27 Goswell Road. E.C. 1. London IN FRANCE -SWEDA INTERNATIONAL/OEM,9/15 AvenuePaul Doumer. 92504 Rueil-Malmauon Motorola Display Products has some exciting surprises with the computer world ■Sr from a new position of powe ■ 1 for you at Booth 1347A If you think Motorola Display Products only makes quality CRT display modules, you're in for some exciting surprises when you visit us this year. Along with the fine quality CRT display modules you saw if you visited our booth last year, you'll find all this besides: 1 mmmlttmmillll^^^^^^^^_^_^_ llll^^^^^ LSl's new ADM-2 video display terminal puts you in touch with the computer world. At a price that isn't out of reach, And with an industry standard interface to speed BBRl,^i^««^ (■■i^-... pre-programmed commands. Asynchronous data output comes in eight switchable rates up to 9600 baud. For more power, LSI options include polling, addressing HSli^te. HBi^ate system integration. We've even gone beyond Interface to outerfacethe important person-to-termlnal connection. Eight status displays, formatting, and a dual-intensity protect mode blend operator and machine into an efficient team. Our basic keyboard can provide the full ASCII set, Including upper and There's also a built-in numeric pad. Plus special function keys for a cess f to thirty-two J?*!S2l M M M M M . and line printing. Find out how well we interface-and outerface-with your world. Call (714) 774-1010 for our attractive pricing structure or write for free literature.Lear Siegler. Inc.. Electronic Instrumentation Div.. 714 n. Brookhurst, Anaheim, CA 92803, WL i l §. X mmi. m INC. LEAR ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTATION DIVISION Dataproducts ■ A new completely modular line of CRT displays 5" to 1 4" screen sizes in a new package designed around plug-in boards and modules to give you the features and mechanical configurations you want, fast. ■ The "super-sleuth" MPU logic analyzer Motorola's answer to your microprocessor logic problems. Design, develop and test all phases of your MPU logic as it is displayed on a CRT screen. ■ MagiCoCOre A futuristic, fully computerized scoring system for bowling, devel oped by Motorola Display Products for AMF. ■ The Motorola DGIOO character generator An invaluable tool for use in the design and production testing of CRT displays. ■ A new kind of information display system Designed for maximum flexibility and cost effectiveness in the airline and transpor tation markets Come and see us. We'll be expecting you at Booth 1347A. MOTOROLA Display Products The mind to imagine... the skill to do I \ Booth No. 1214, 1216 KEY TRONIC CORPORA Building 14, Spokane Industrial Spokane, Washington 99216 Tel erby 8 No. 26! MAGNUSONIC DEVICES. IN IBB9V. X :o !W 10 rz York 1180 Te < tional I teat I P f< Booth No. 1244, 1246 KYBE CORP. 132Calvary Waltham, Massachusetts 02154 02154 ... .... Te : ( l] 11 i«t,aivaryMreet,waitnam,Massachusetts „ VmlS;? ' ?336 it tZt ,ii;;i £££^ If, "f H? * " PinlC Ca.L.a Dp'lo'di^'n' P k"? II D type yP pa cks t.i. 4 EMH ner aS! tape testers, both ith improved modern design and many s age options, and introducing :ompletely new KYBE f magnetic nd rem< „„ , 10th No. 1221 mi Rnnth lnl BOOH! Hn NO. 2101 lSgic SYSTEMS 3520 Vic,or S,reet' San,a C,ara Ca,ifornia 95050 Calvin Hefte Tel: (408) 264-8319 f °" „ s/r °"_, "*VX, i OEM aDnlicariona plications. r "v is is to Booth No. 2348 LEAR EID 714 N Brookhurst St Anaheim, California 92803 TomViggers Tel: (714) 774-1010 will present the ADM family of interactive CRT display terminals. The ADM-1 is a low-priced, versatile unit featuring a 960-character 12" screen field protect mode, selectable transmission rates, and full editing capabilities. he ADM-2 is a more versatile terminal roviding 32 selectable programs sepate but integral numeric keyboard lock or conventional transmission and number of other powerful capabilities. The ADM-3 is a new terminal, very lowpriced, for basic terminal applications. Booth No. 2722, 2724 LICON ILLINOIS TOOL INC. 6615 W. Irving Pk. Road, Chicago, Illinois 60634 JackSpeiden Tel: (312) 282-4040 Lighted switches, keyswitches, Keyboards, Lighted kevswitches. basic enclosed switches. Booth No. 1218 INC. 1630Euclid Santa Monica, California 90404 Donald S. Elderson Tel: (213) 393-0449 or (213) 393-0440 a) Long-life full ferrite iernie core core muiticnanmultichani^ong-uie run nel magnetic tape heads for various v^ b> , ;-M1 ° nefds Tan? ! tract B*oo £? SS 1600 BPI TBM Cad nB ■ i aa IROOBPT c) Multichannel fixed head per per iracK nytrack flying disc heads, barium titinate pads ith ferrit i) Single and dual track flying d heads designed for high rehab i-mmuidiiuci nvironmer 41 leads tr 1 i iiacu ~ W J '' - UB1I "«"« '& primer programmable to speeds *A" ! «P oyer length ot paper. -use step a1 8 i^ißirca std incremental i plotter interlace and plotting subroutines (third generation graphics software also I b cc mmod te? baU Aink pens, Point, fiber tip, blackball/liquid "g? j£> .l ° „..,.„ .„„„ Fj„,s°JJ ?'." BCORP. PRODUCTS JJRAIM Lorain, Ohio 44052 ''22 F. ' fI 15 L'oyd G. Hastings Tel: (216) 288-1122, ext. 387 Lorain UPS systems protect critical proce ?,s equipmentsuch as computers against aU tyl?es ot AC llne (blackouts, brownouts, flickouts). Acting as a con(with reserve finuous monitor/ battery plant) between AC P° wer source and the computer, the Lorain solid-state UPS guarantees preregulated voltage and frequency to the load despite changes on the commercialAC supply. Standard UPS capacities accommo- ate loads from mini-comput larger data processing p installations. Booth No 2362 3M COMPANY—DATA RECORDING PRODUCTS DIVISION Bldg. 224-6, St. Paul, Minnesota 55101 3M A. Rames Tel: (612) 733-1995 3M Company's Data Recording Products display their Division will display their total uivision will total line line nagnetic recording recording me magnetic media to include computer tape, diskettes, disk packs and *** Rnnth Nn. 9KRI o«, MAGnSx "* The Magnavox Model :k 10.0 play Terminal for alphs dis Maenetic c Vtrin, .S n as " i%"^ ( 3e: punched Booth No. 2363 MASTER SPECIALTIES COMPANY 1640 Monrovia, Costa Mesa, California 92627 Kenneth T. Renaud Tel: (714 642 2427 Solid State Expandable Voice Annun ciators and Solid State Switches Booth No. 2600 MCDONNELL DOUGLAS ELECTRONICS COMPANY P. 0. Box 426, St. Missouri 63301 Gerald H. Holman Tel: (314) 232-0232 ext. 2284 The McDonnell Douglas 1018 series of Data Exchange Systems combine for the time the wid cost effective of methods for da entry, retrieval and simulation in lation, batch processing and voice response in one system. At one low system price. and other I/O devices accommodated b} the systems. This wide range of hard ware capability is completely supported „ i . "" f.0 "°. McGRAW-HILL BOOK CO. 1221 Aye of ,ha *"""''«««. New York, N.Y. 10020 Ken Bowman, Editor Tel: (212) 997-4266 c n dis lay at the P McGraw-Hill Book Company booth are the most up-to-da books in the field of comPuter science. Booth No JW Booth No 2553 MDB SYSTEMS INC 981 N. Main Orange, California 92667 W 639 ?238 Designer B and manuracrurer manufacturer ot: General of .- ueni " M ; !^Jf^. "^J^.l^ NOVA and TntPrdam i \ erS EauSt^S^T?^i^* trollers forth niters (other than rotating lultiplt r le Data Acquisition System 'V > Booth 2600) beainnina May 19 a in MCDONNELL DOUGLAS JiTalkfeMavisT! r «^ / — >!■— . i I allu rnmn,,*." i Fill out the coupon for the full Mavis story. ° JT' "' "T * ? at n wi - acturers if Introducing an incredible new voice response Data Exchange System. Now you get data entry, 3270 simu- versally available terminal —tl phone—by means of touch tor voice response, complements the CRT'< U THE mc mnbNAVUA COMPANY 1700 Magnavox Way, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46804 Tyler Hunt Tel: (219)482-4411 phics MAG-TEK INC 1513 E. Del Anio B.vd., California 90746 C. McGeary Tel: (213) 631-8602 Tjomas Magnetic stripe card readers and read I El I B( I St I Ye M in L. I I I _l Booth No. 2422, 2424 MEDIA 111 2259 Via Burton, Anaheim, California 92806 Glenn C. Salley (714) 870-7660 MICOS Small Business Computer System; Single or Multiuser; Programmable In Extensive BASIC or Supplied With Custom And Standard Applications Software Packages. Minicomputer Peripheral Equipment. Booth No. 1115, 1117 MEGADATA COMPUTER & COMMUNICATIONS CORP. 35 Orville Drive, Bohemia, New York 11716 John A. Hill Tel: (516) 589-6800 MCCC manufactures a complete line of terminals; Intelligent, Non-Intelligent, and with Graphics, and complete peripheral capabilities. MEGADA TA Model SiR-IOOOC four and eight color intelligent programmable terminal. Model SiR-IOOOTE terminal complete with editing features including paragraph integrity, word break inhibit. SiR-IOOOTPS Touch screen terminal. Operation of terminal utilizes a touch screen. The face of the terminal virtually eliminates the use of keyboards. Used in Inquiry Information Systems. MAC NeT Model MN 1000 Airlines Communications Network terminal used for 81D, 838, 85A Communications and Reservations Systems terminal. Booth No. 2145, 2147, 2149 MELCO U.S.A. INC. Compton, California 90221 3030 E. Victoria Hiroaki Sando Tel: (213) 636-2331 M345 Color Character Display offers Tricolor display with higher performance than any other display. 2000 characters, bar-graphs, tabulation, blinking, light- ; pen various editing capability, etc. terminal Line interfaces are multiplexer and connectable up to 9600 BPS. Melcom-80/11 is high performance small scale computer with 6KB memory and 60KB disk. MT cassette, paper tape devices, floppy disk, cartridge disk, lineprinter, communication unit and other devices are optional. Applied to billing, warehouse control, etc. Booth No. 2151 MFE COMPUTER ACCESS SYSTEMS Keewaydin Drive, New Hampshire 03079 Jim Saret Tel: (603) 893-1921 I Booth No. 2341, 2343 MICRO SWITCH Freeport, Illinois 61032 11 West Spring Thomas S. Ingala Tel: (815)232-1122 MICRO SWITCH will be displaying their broad line of solid state keyboards and keyboard modules. Also on display will be high performance DC motors; their newest line lighted pushbutton switches and solid state switches. Booth No. 1234, 1236, 1238 MIRCO SYSTEMS INC. 2106 W. Peoria Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona 85029 Robert E. Anderson Tel: (602) 997-5931 Logic-circuit testers and test systems for production, engineering, depot, & field service use. Booth No. 1705, 1707 MODERN DATA SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 369, Hudson, Massachusetts 01749 S. Henry Sacks Tel: (617) 562-9305 1. MODEBN DATA—Monthly magazine covering computer technology. A 2. FEDERAL ADP PROCUREMENT reference guide to the buying and selling of ADP equipment to the federal — government. Booth No. 1529 MODULAR COMPUTER SYSTEMS, INC. 1650 W. McNab Rd., Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33309 Paul T. Haller Tel: (305) 974-1380 The company will display working members of the MODCOMP family of computers, including MODCOMP I and MODCOMP II minis and the MODCOMP IV midi, operating under the MODCOMP higher level software. The individual family members will be featured in islands-of-interest displays. Booth No. 1500, 1502,1504 MONOLITHIC SYSTEMS CORPORATION 14 Inverness Drive East, Englewood, Colorado80110 Gordon Perkins Tel: (303) 761-2275/770-7400 Semiconductor memory systems. MONOSTORE/MODULARS 111,V, VII, X MONOSTORE/PLANAR IV, V, VI, VII MONOSTORE/ADD-ON 111, VII, X MONOSTORE/ADD-IN VII Booth No. 2718, 2720 THE CALCULATOR COMPANY 550 Central Avenue, Orange, New Jersey 07051 Donald E. Sharkey Tel: (201) 673-6600 Model 1800 Series Programmable Desk Top Calculators Monroe 300 Series Hand-held Scientific Micro Computers Model 395 Teleprinter Interface for Model 300 and 1800 Series Model 1900 Series Statistical & Scientific Electronic Display Calculators Booth No. 1347A DISPLAY PRODUCTS MOTOROLA Illinois 60187 455 E. North Avenue, Carol Francey Freeman Tel: (312) 690-1400 Motorola is introducing a completely modular concept in CRT displays this year, in addition to the current production and custom line. Motorola offers screen sizes from 5" to 23", chassis-only, cabinet or rack-mounted models, composite video or separate sync inputs, high and low voltage regulation, 600 to 1000 line resolution, 10Hz to 22MHz video reponse, horizontal frequency to 18KHz, free-running horizontal and verticaloscillators, and StepScan. Booth No. 1462 INC. MOTOROLA SEMICONDUCTOR 5005 East McDowell Road, Phoenix, Arizona 85036 W. W. Wallace Tel: (602) 949-3342 Microprocessor, LSI Products, Memories, Interfacing ICs. Booth No. 2224 Booth No. 1153, 1155 NIPPON PERIPHERALS LTD. Okuda 2nd Bldg. 2039-93 Kugenuma Fujisawa-shi Kanagawa-Ken 251, Japan Tel: 0466/26-2537 (JAPAN) Nippon Peripherals Ltd., a joint venture company of Fujitsu and Hitachi will display New Disk Drives and Data Module which are compatible withIBM 3340 and 3348. Also on display will be several parts and sub-assemblieswhich are used in the drives and the data module. Monroe announces the world's most powerful hand-held computer. Booth No. 1300 More program power. NORTH HOLLAND-AMERICAN ELSEVIER Over 50,000 program steps on tape plus internal storage. More storage power. Over 4,000 registers on tape plus internal PUBLISHING COMPANY 52 Vanderbilt Avenue, New York, New York 10017 Benjamin M. Schrager Tel: (212) MU 6-5277 On display will be the latest books and journals published by North-Holland Publishing Company, Amsterdam and New York and American Elsevier Publishing Company. The publications of the InternationalFederation for Information Processing now being published through North-Holland Publishing Company will be featured at our display. Key books of interest include INFORMATION PROCESSING '74 and MEDINFO 74. The COMPUTER MONOGRAPH SERIES AND THE ELSEVIER COMPUTER SCIENCE LIBRARY are American Elsevier storage. More keyboard power. Over 100 hard-wired functions directly accessible from the keyboard. More sub-routine power. Unlimited with symbolic series of interest. addressing. Booth No. 1641 conversion power. More metric Unlimited Metric/English conversions. More simplicity. Fully algebraic operation. NORTRONICS INC. 8101 Tenth Aye North, Minneapolis, Minn. 55427 Men/in Kronfeld Tel: (612) 545-0401 To be displayed : 1. Vi" IBM compatible heads. 2. .150" cassette, DC Series read-afterwrite, and tunnel write More equation power. heads. 3. Floppy Disk Nested parentheses up to 4 levels. More portable power. Ready for use with either rechargeable batteries or AC current. More available power. See the 326 or the printing model 325 in your office today. Just call Monroe in any of 365 cities in the United States and Canada read/write tunnel erase heads, complete IBM compatibility; also introducing the new ferrite floppy disk head. 4. Magnetic credit card heads meeting ABA, Savings Institution, and lATA formats. 5. Ledger card and merchandise tag magnetic heads. 6. Vi" 3M data cartridge, DQ Series readwrite and read-after-write heads for data storage, processing, program loading, peripheral applications. 1, 2, 4 tracks. 7. Pass Book Heads. 8. Hall Element Heads. LTCTM (Lifetime Ceramic), newest hard coat technology extending lifetime of digital heads by a factor of ten. I More calculators for business I engineering. for SsK:r calculators More I I science. for "riZi,,. More calculators a representative LJ MOre deSK-tOP COmpUterS. Send me complete information I I by return on More service centers. □ KiBSSJf I Booth No. 2629 OKIDATA CORPORATION call Have 111 Gaither Drive, Moorestown, New Jersey 08057 NETWORK ANALYSIS CORP. Jacob R. Powell Tel: (609) 235-2600 N.Y. 11542 Okidata will exhibit enhancement to its Beechwood, Old Tappan Rd., Glen Lynn Hopewell Tel: (516) 671-9580 line of medium speed printers including tractor feed and upper/ Telecommunications network analysis R5232 and design. Network architecture equip- lower case. Other products include a low ment selection, computer and communi- cost hand-fed card reader/mark reader, an enhanced head per track disc memory cations network optimizations, system system and alphanumeric gas discharge monitoring and testing, response time, displays in a variety of configurations. reliability and availability analysis. mail. your line MONROE The Calculator Company. Litton 50 \ No other company has more. I I Name Company Name I Address City Phone State Zip I Booth No. 2744, 2746 ONTEL CORPORATION Plainvlew, New York 11803 3 Fairchlld Ivan Shomer Tel: (516) 822-7800 Ontel OP-1 fully programmable intelligent terminals are used in distributed data processing environment and other applications requiring data entry, editing and high speed input/output. Designed as a sta.nd-alone or on-line system, programs can be loadedfrom a central computer in a on-line operation or from local storage media. The OP-1 system, complete with peripheral controllers, provide program control of all communications disciplines in asnychronous and Talk to your v mini's with Panasonic punched card/badge reading Data Entry synchronous environments. Booth No. 2400, 2303 INC.—ELECTRO-OPTICAL BUSINESS OPERATIONS P.O. Box 1035,Toledo, Ohio 43666 program loader ia a briefcase ! i I STR-LIIIK Barry R. Zadiqian Tel: (419) 242-6543, ext. 66-508 Owens-Illinois' DIGIVUE units are digitally and randomly addressedAC plasma displays. Alphanumeric/ graphic messages can be clearly shown on both models: The 512 x 512 and 80 x 256 matrices. Selective write/erase capabilities are an excellent editing feature of our flickerfree display. The MOS compatible Pantek displays feature an ALL GLASS construction, eliminating the unpopular bulky tubulation. Booth No. 2349, 2351 PANASONIC/ MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC CORP. OF AMERICA 2960 Hart Drive, Franklin Park, Illinois 60131 Roger Smith Tel: (312) 451-1340 STR-LINK is the first portable program loader to give you so many advantages in one package. It's compact enough that you can carry it any- where. And its versatile enough that you can use it almost anywhere. STR-LINK has a built-in interface that makes it compatible with line printers, mini-computers, programmable controllersand send/receive printing terminals. The key to STR-LINK's performance is our patented Speed-Tolerant Recording, a single-track, self-clocked technique that eliminates the need for an ultra precise drivemechanism. Other features include: 20 MA current loop or RS232C. Read/Write capability at 110, 150, 300, 600 and 1200 baud. Ability to write at one speed, play back at that " " " speed or any higher. Relay Rack-Mount Kit available. " 19" STR-LINK is available through sales offices in over 25 major cities in the U.S. and Canada. And best of all, it costs as little as $995 in OEM quantities! For complete information on the most revolutionary program loader ever, write or call today. II ELECTRON! PROCESSORS i||| inCORPORRTED 1265 W. Dartmouth Avenue, Englewood, Colorado 80110 Phone: 303/761-8540 TWX 910-933-0171 — Data Collection Terminals Remarkably low cost, compact, and reliable devices, utilizing punched cards, badges, and optional keypad. Data is transmittedfrom a source location via a twisted pair of wires to an industry standard RS-232 interface to a CPU and/ or an off-line collection device. Economy is achieved through the elimination of expensive controllers, multiplexers, coaxial cable and polling software. The devices are ideal for time attendance, job costing, and inventory control. Booth No. 2548 PAPER/CYBERNETICS 3505 Breakwater Aye., Hayward, California 94544 M. Smith Tel: (415)786-2800 Booth No. 2250 PERIPHERAL DYNAMICS INC. 1030 W. Germantown Pike, Norristown, Pa. 19401 Charles J. Dobson Tel: (215) 539-5500 Punched hole and punched hole/optical mark card readers, 150 to 600 cpm, both table top and rack mount. R5232 option available with mark sense card readers. Booth No. 2658 PERSCI INC P.O. Box 972, Pacific Palisades, California 90272 Robert W. Erickson Tel: (213) 454-6091 PerSci Products That Will Be Displayed at The 75 NCC IBM Compatible Diskette Drive Features include: fastest positioner; smallest size; lowest power consumption; most convenient Operator Diskette \ Terminals Talk directly without intermediary line controllers or pollers. Direct to your minicomputers. Offline to paper tape, teleprinter, or cassette mag tape. Or direct to your central data processing unit. Panasonic punched card and badge reading Data Entry Terminals are the unique source-data collection devices that fit into your existing EDP system. Just take a pair of wires from the TTY or RS-232-C data communications interface of your mini, offline recorder, or CPU and hang as many Panasonic Data Entry Terminals across the wires as you like. Amazingly enough, there's no need for any external line controller, multiplexer, or polling device. When more than one terminal is used simultaneously, each will wait its turn to read into the computer. Panasonic Data Entry Terminals are now available off-the-shelf for immediate delivery. And they're made in the United States, so service is no problem. Take a look at some of the features and applications of Panasonic Data Entry Terminals: Standard Features Full TTY or RS-232-C compatibility " 110 to 1200 baud " 10 characters of alpha-numeric card/badge data entry " Ultra reliable optical static readers and C-MOS ICs " Small size (12" x 9" x 6") and lightweight (10 lbs.) Optional Features ACK/NACK computer reply " Automatic card eject " Up to 22 characters of card data and 18 digits of variable data entry " Central time clock and visual time display " Wall mounting bracket Applications Time attendance " Labor reporting and job cost analysis " Production control " Work order entry " Inventory update " Access control To find out more about talking high grade, real time data to your minis, offline recorders, and to your CPU, send in the coupon. Pa||OCO||JQ our technology is all around you Matsushita Electric Corp. of America Industrial Division Name 200 Park Avenue, N.Y., N.Y. 10017 Telephone: (212) 973-8907 Attn: KenTerasaki Title □ Please send D.E.T. literature. □ Please call at Address Company City State Zip handling; quiet, all DC operation; New IBM compatible long-life head; variety of options; competitive pricing. Diskette Handler A low-cost attachment to the PerSci Diskette Drive that allows sequential remote-controlled processing of up to 20 Diskettes. Diskette Drive Subsystem Interfaces up to 4 PerSci Diskette Drives with a PDP-1 1 minicomputer. Booth No. 1429 PERTEC 9600 Irondale Aye., California 91311 Neil A. McElwee Tel: (213) 882-0030 DIGITAL MAGNETIC TAPE TRANSincluding the T6OOO and TBOOOA series of tension arm transports, and the T9OOO vacuum column transport. DISK MEMORY including the D3OOO series rigid disk drives, 100 tpi and 200 tpi models; the FD4OO Flexible Disk Drive. DATA FORMATTERS for the tape transports and disk drives. MODEL 7100 CRT TERMINAL, a flexible alphanumeric display terminal, adaptable to the user's needs. Booth No. 2141 i PETROCELLI/CHARTER 384 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 07040 David Rlcherson Tel: (212) 695-1555 i Petrocelli/Charter publishes professional and textbooks in Computer Data Processing and Information Systems, and Management Science. Some recent publications to be shown at our exhibit include : Reliable Software Through Composite Design, Introduction to Artificial Intelligence, Top-Down Structured Programming Techniques, Handbook of APL Programming, Computers and Management for Business, Strategic Planning for Management Information Systems, Introduction to Computer Computer Techniques in Environmental Science, Introduction to Operating Systems Principles, and 1974 Best Computer Papers. Booth No. 1655,1657, 1661 INC. 9168 DeSoto Avenue, California 91311 Jeanie Clarke Tel: (213) 882-0004 AC-DC Power Supplies, DC Regulators, Inverters, Switching Power Supplies, Lab Supplies and Sub Modular Power Sup- plies. Booth No. 1161, 1163 PRACTICAL INC. P.O. Box 313, Trap Falls Rd., Shelton Conn. 06484 Richard Banzaca Tel: (203) 929-5381 Numeric and full alphanumeric Tape and Ticket printers. High speed dot matrix print mechanisms and print heads. Printing Digital Voltmeters and printing counters. Switching and Commutating print modules. Booth No. 1701 PRECISION INC. 8825 Telegraph Road,Lorton, Virginia 22079 W.B. Sinclair Tel: (703) 339-7050 Precision Methods, Inc. is a complete and independent Data Laboratory designed to give the commercial, Industrial and government disk pack owners and users precise rebuilding, converting, inspection, cleaning, trouble shooting service and on-site preventive maintenance for disk packs and cartridges. PMl's Data Laboratory is fully equipped with the latest and most precise electronic testing equipment available. Our personnel are highly trained technicians. These same technicians perform the customer's on-site disk pack/ cartridge cleaning and preventive maintenance services. Booth No. 1555 PREMIX, INC. P.O. Box 281, North Kingsville, Ohio 44068 Daniel T. Hayes Tel: (216) 224-2181 Produce full range of Premi-Glas® fiberglass reinforced molding compounds. UL recognized for computer applications including radiant panel test requirements. Supply OEM computer component manufacturers with custom molded terminal housings, equipment bases, keyboard covers and enclosure panels for all types of peripheral equipment. Booth No. 2242, 2244 INC. Englewood New Jersey07632 College Exhibit Coord. Gert Tel: (201) 947-1000 Ext. 2715 College Textbooks & Reference Books. Booth No. 2338 PRIME INC. 145 Pennsylvania Aye., Framingham, Mass. 01701 Gabe d'Annunzlo Tel: (617) 879-2960 PRIME Computer presents the virtual memory PRIME 300; A multiuser, multilingual system that gives each of 15 users a completely independent virtual computer. Each with 128 X virtual memory and disk operating system. Each programmable in BASIC and Assembler. Booth No. 1145,1147 PRINCETON ELECTRONIC INC. P.O. Box 101, North Brunswick, New Jersey 08902 John S. Certo Tel: (201) 297-4448 The Princeton 801 graphic computer terminal and PEP-400 image storage and scan conversion terminals using the company's LITHOCON® silicon storage tube will be displayed. The Princeton 801 is a stored image computer terminal allowing display of an unlimited amount of information flicker and features selective erase, electronic zoom, gray scale on large bright displays. The scan converters are used for display refresh memories and for storing and displaying images. Booth No. 1358 INC. Irvine, California 92707 17935 Sky Park Mcl Posln Tel: (714) 549-8272 The PRINTRONIX 300 is a unique, 300 LPM, multi-copy printer. An overlapping dot matrix provides the appearance of solid-front characters. Non-adjustable precision hammers provide consistently good registration both horizontally and vertically, and their high ensure excellent sixth copy clarity. Characters are ROM generated; hence special or extended character sets are possible. A plot mode is also standard. Simplicity of design results in low initial cost and high reliability. Booth No. 1211, 1213 \ PROGRAMMED INC. 141 Jefferson Drive, Menlo Park, California 94025 Jim Weatherman Tel: (415) 323-8454 NEW 75 KVA Frequency 60 to 400 Hz, adaptable to UPS Operation. Features: All Solid 85% Efficiency, Parallel Redundant Operation. Power Line Disturbance Monitors, Models 3401, 3402, and 3415. This precedent-setting family of unique monitors detects undervoltages, overvoltages, fast transients, frequency deviations, and NEW TRANSIENT DIRECTION DETECTION. Single and three phase. 100-500 50/60 or 400/415/441 Hz. Booth No. 2550 PRO-LOG CORPORATION 852 Airport Road, Monterey, California 93940 Edwin Lee Tel: (408) 372-4593 Microprocessor Test Equipment. Microprocessor Systems/ and PROM Programmers. The Microprocessor systems include modules using the 4004, the 8008 and 4040 microprocessors. The PROM programmers are portable systems capable of programming any PROM being manufactured. Data will also be distributed on Pro-Log's microprocessor design courses. Booth No. 1240 The Peripherals Division of NorthAtlantic Industries, Inc. 200 Terminal Drive, Plalnview, New York 11803 F. G. Roberts Tel: (516) 681-8350 Digital tape drive, tape storage system. Booth No. 2623, 2625 SCIENCE CORPORATION P.O. Box 397, Palo Alto, California94304 Walter P. Smith Tel: (415) 327-8400 Integrated Information services for the computer industry including: Market opportunities reports, computer user information reports; Remote Computing Industry Directory; Multiclient studies on time-sharing, terminals and digital communications; MAPTEK IV Computer Installation Data Base; MAPTEK planning services for computer equipment, computer services and Market Research and planning services for Europe and Japan. Booth No. 1619, 1621,1623, 1625 CORPORATION 2323 Industrial Parkway West Hayward, California 94545 Avery Blake Tel: (415) 783-6100 High speed character (Daisy Wheel) printers for OEM Markets in terminals, word processing, small business systems. Two models: Q3O and Q45 at 30 CPS and 45 CPS. Various forms handling options up to 12 copies. Emphasizing excellent print quality, reliability and serviceability. HP3OOOCX Mini DataCenters Think of them as branch offices. Computers for the many data handling "customers" within a company. The 3000CX is a series of small, terminal-oriented systems that work as an adjunct to the corporate EDP center. Not just minicomputers. Mini DataCenters. They're the only minis with a single, fully multiprogrammed, multiuse, operating system. You get spooling, virtual memory, and a communications subsystem to link Mini DataCenters to each other. And to the big number crunchers as well. You can run programs in five languages (any combination), in all three modes — time-share, and batch. Full service "branches." A Mini DataCenter will support an entire department or division with interactive terminals and options to handle tasks in business, science, and industry. FINANCE 8 ACCOUNTING / '*>) | 1 1 3000 CX V "i TO CORPORATE EDP SYSTEM while the folks in R&D are using a Mini DataCenter for real-time data acquisition, shipping is using it to call up orders, and marketing is generating a quarterly sales report. As the volume increases, add another 3000CX (or two). More for your money. Call HP and see one in action. Then you decide. Four 3000CX models cost from $99,500 to $203,500 in the USA. Low enough to let you branch out now. HP minicomputers. They work for a living. HEWLETT Jipj PACKARD and service from 172 offices in 65 countries. 1501 Page Mill 54 RESEARCH S DEVELOPMENT Road. Palo California 94304 22518 ewsweek Condensed Books Four exciting best sellers for only $5.95 Newsweek Condensed Books is a convenient, inexpensiveservice provided by the Newsweek organization for people who like to be well informed and widely read. 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It brings forth the latest published consideration of what we really research— and the authors' own want out of life—and the sanest interviews with leading world way to go about gettingit. medical specialists—to prove (Publisher's Edition: And Just for lookingat the introductory volume, you get a FREE GIFT: this attractivehardboundvolume containing Newsweek'sillustrated conden-y sation of SURVIVE THE SAVAGE SEA byDougal £p Robertson. A harrowing, yet deeplyinspiring true story of 1"* i fmu *?'*'* a shipwrecked family's 38-day L ordeal in the Pacific. Ernest K. mm Ganncalled it "one of the greatendurance classics of all time." It is yours to keepunconditionally—ifyoutake advantage of this 10-day trialoffer on Newsweek In months to come— look for great selections like these: F.D.R./Last Year April 44-45 Newsweek Condensed Books The NewsweekBuilding, Box 415, Livingston, N.J.07039 YES, please send me the first volume of Newsweek Condensed Books for 10 days' free examination. And enter subscription to theNewsweek Condensed Books series. If Ichoose not to keep the book. I return it within 10 days— without further obligation. IfI keep the Newsweek will bill me for plus postage and handling. Iwill then receive future volumes in the series— one at a approximately everyother month. Each costs $5.95 plus postage and handling, and each comes on a 10-day free trial basis. I may discontinue at case, the free gift is mine to keep.) time simply by notifying in writing. (In Jim Bishop Lynn Came Widow The Mountain People Colin M.Turnbull Pursuit Ludovic Kennedy Times to Remember Rose Kennedy DrewPearson Diaries Edited by Tyler Abell John Robert Nash Bloodletters andBadmen But There Are Always Miracles . Jackand Mary Willis The Americans Daniel J.Boorstin John Burke Legend ofBaby Doe Howard Cosell Cosell Geoffrey Morehouse The Fearful Void Myra Friedman Buried Alive Tim Jeal Livingstone And many, many more! c Name Address | City State Zip \ / MAKINGA L^^^^m DATA BASE DECISION? DO YOU NEED ■ Host (COBOL, ALC, FORTRAN) and Query (ADASCRIPT) Language Facilities? ■ Report Generator (ADAWRITER) ■ ■ ■ CAN YOU USE _ ■ Flexibility to Meet Changing Requirements? „ . m^^^ , Structures? „ ._ . . Concurrent On-Line and Batch Processing? .cm Full Inversion of Selected Data Operating System (MFT, MVT, VS) ng SVS,Bm Compatibility? _ „ . ._ . _ , _ . Fields? „ ADABAS IS THE ANSWER ?„„ J CORPORATIONSunnyvale, -292 Commercial California 94086 ChariaiW.Non.by Tel: (408) 735-8400 ext. 280 GX-100 Color and Black & White raster scan display systems. Imaging full — graphic and alphanumeric capabilities, multicolor or grey scale. FS2OOO - Rectilinear raster graphic color display system. Full screen addressability (256x256 grid). Single byte dynamic updates in both graphic and alpha- numeric modes. Bit selection of any of four character sizes and normal or reverse background. Field expandable from one to eight displays. Booth No. 1455 nikinriMry imp nWarrior Drive ■ 27303 Rancho Palos Verdes, California 90274 Joseph M. Ludka Tel: (213) 377-9887 Randomex this year will display four disc cleaners, one of its original Model #235 cleaners, which will clean 1316 and 2316 type disc packs, and one of its Model ?T»T»'nHWfi Hiilav ta^lPari. #-:n5 rleaners whir-h will .i«,„ iQiR 2316 11 TWOn display tor the first time will be l On production models of both new DISC CARTRIDGE cleaners, the Model 515 and 535. Model 515 is for use with frontloading, 2315 type disc cartridges, and Model 535 is for use with Top-loading. 5440 type disc cartridges. All models .. . , For More Information Call or Write . ■—».—*£%-. m»^m.^^^— SLJIUULjOI^B CjC_ w«.wwm b k.lW| Reston International Center 1' *» Sunrise Valley Drive Reston, Virginia 22091 (703) 620 9577 ADABAS IS THE ANSWER V »uT»rn D M..T.ny , Bu^rManagea rmenn'OPh,St'Cated O Where It lsr Where It's heading „ Conversion of Existing Systems Without Redesign or Reprogramming? , -r ■ Minimal Training Requirement? , Reduced On-Line Storage via Data Compression? S!S!SiW 58 L Complex Hierarchic and Network Capability? Data Program Independence? Complete Data Protection and Data Security? ■ Computer Science m ter than 97% contamination removal in fully automatic cleaning sequences. _.„,.„,,.,. - RAYMOND INC. 217 Smith Middletown, Connecticut 06457 Samuel Lapenson Tel: (203) 632-1000 RAYCORDER Digital Cassette Recorder ls {"c choice of top names of OEM's in the computer industry. Thousands are presently in daily use, serving in a wide variety of applications. Available to OEM's as transport units, or complete with interface electronics. Raycorder units are 100% compatible with existing data systems. Booth no. Doom No 1703 RCA SERVICE COMPANY TECHNICAL SERVICES Building 204-2, Cherry Hill Raymond Polivka and Sandra Pakin. May 1975. 608 pp. $17.95 Simulation. — 389 pp $15 95 ' Computer ~. □ J?'.. nate WX/Dataphone Teletype Only Fxtel Receive umy i!,xtei Telenrinter teleprinter. Literareceive T itera tUre n Vari terminals that are avail" able throUgh RCA also ava a Me- magnetic tapes. Computer Tape Evaluator (CTE)— An industry standard for fast cleaning and evaluating of magnetic tapes been updated to provide 6250 bpi testing. Digital Cassette Evaluator (DCE) How good are those digital cassettes? The Recortec DCE will evaluate and report "ooth N 2353, 2355 ha" °- CORPORATION REDACTRON 100 Parkway Drive Hauppauge, N.Y. 11787 T. Reantillo Tel: (516) 543-8700 OEM low-cost high-reliability line of peripherals which includes Series 200 Magnetic Card Transport fuse of tab slz c „ia j: cariI wit! B1 81920 a bits aata daU stor ' ., avaJab ln ?, »?f; c mPat">'e model) . ° ° " Booth No. 1304, 1306 INC. 777 Palomar Avenue, Sunnyvale, California 94086 Ron Troxell Tel: (408) 735-8821 Computer Tape Copier (CTC) First showing of a new, off-line tape duplica- - . specification ,ZXZ7.AZ, I unique peak a and compact > uses -aL compacl us^= sensing read/ width write circuitry, RAW head available in 1 , 2, 4 track versions); Series 500 1,000 „„„,. Ti„ „ D„ R MomlA (capable of„ *<* npU ■' ." ' , .. Solut^ \? Sfs^ : . J *-t ? featuring %*£^Ccrset^ransTo?tr m^la^i r f, ° S^e eclronTc" S electromcs mth RAwT^at" RAW head d " ard) ransp rt ( eatunng stan ... y/ Data-Base Organization v , . James IBM Systems Research Institution. ti March 1975. approx. 528 pp. $26.50 tion and verification system. The CTC provides a economical way for semiskilled personnel to duplicate verify or ' „ „ D Dynamic Information and Library Processing Gerald Saltan, Cornell University. May 1975. Approx 416 pp. $16.50 □ University of Engineering Cybernetics. Robert m. Massachusetts 1975 approx 272 PP . $1 5.95 D Fundamental ANSI COBOL Programming James T. Maginnis, Drexel University. January 1975. 400 pp. paper $9.00. cloth $12.95 □ _ _ _. ._ . Language/One, . . 3rd Edition: With □ Programming nn r Programming. Frank Bates and Mary L. Douglas. Structured _, * ,,„_ 1975. approx. 41 6 * $8.95. c oth $ 1 1 .95. XX fpp. X paper H In D R pG for |BM Systems/360> 370 and System/3 Richard C. Loschetter, Moraine Valley Community College. 1 975. . .. 452 pp. $20.50. .. ,-, c r, S °* „ ?8 and L st Processing in SNOBOL 4: Techniques ' and Appl.cations. Ralph E. Criswold, University of Arizona. 1975. 287 pp $12 50 □ Structured Programming and Problem-Solving with H.Troy Nagle, Jr., B.D. and J. David Irwin, all of Auburn University. 1975. 529 pp. ALGOL VV. Richard Kieburtz, SUN V at Stonybrook. May 1975. - n Switching Circuits for Engineers, 3rd Edition Mitchell Introduction to Computer Logic 7 95 Implementation, 2nd Edition. Terrence W. Pratt, University of Texas. March 1975 530 pp. $16.50. i s. March 1975. Corporation. rvtarcn IBM Geoffrey BMLorporation. simulation.ueorrreyLioraon, 57l t'tlSd/B T TSt ° L Gnuman £S ?^K» TO-6087 J^S^ the Model 33ASR Alter- DcToOATarSd^m JtTpr^o e^ANsI T eltremeTy and the ramrlpn Npw Ipmpv nnim □ Programming Languages: Design and □ APL: The Language and Its Usage □ Application of GPSS V to Discrete System J clean and evaluate Vs-inch Bootn N0 Z358 \ | r- d a, m Logical " Design Operating Systems Alan of< rw,-,.;.,„ c D r 8 ° ° ' State University of Washington, Seattle. 1974. 306 pp. $15.00 D Minicomputer Systems: Organization and Programming Richard Eckhouse, University of Massachusetts. April 1975. approx. 352 pp. $15.95. □ approx. 384 pp. $10.95. .. , Marcus, ,-..,, BM Laboratory 1975 299 pp. id.uu 00 i?/o, w $15 dd » d A Table of Series and Products Eldon R. Hansen, Lockheed Palo Alto Research Labs. January 1 975. approx 544 pp. □ Minicomputer Systems: Structure, Implementation, and Application. Cay Weitzman, TRW Systems, California. Ten Statement FORTRAN Plus FORTRAN IV, 2nd Edition Michael Kennedy and Martin B. Solomon, both of the 1974. 367 pp. $1 5.95. University of Kentucky. 1975. 579 pp. $9.95 We'll be pleased to send you a 15 day examination of any of the books listed above. To order, just check the appropriate books, fill in the blanks on the right and mail this page to Robert Jordan, Box J-203, Prentice-Hall, Englewood N.J. 07632. copy SAVE! If payment accompanies order, we will pay postat the age, handling and insurance charges. end of 15 days, you may either return the book or remit payment. Full return privileges apply in either case if you are not satisfied. Name Address City State Zip Prentice-Hall SOft+haßDware SORD OFFERS OPERATIONAL MICROCOMPUTERS—not just chip HRS YOUft SPC- 1* MET THE THE SMP-80 FAMILY OF MICROCOMPUTERS SUPPORT SYSTEMS Provides cost saving when developingand supporting your systems \ A powerful microcomputer for general purposes, it covers all of the functions required on a computer— using INTEL'S 8080 or identical chip. Our standard MCPU Module, SMP with powerful and low cost systems. provides customers We exhibit MCPU Module, Memory Module, Floppy Disk Pen-input Tablet and Printer Plotter. SMP-80/10 VISIT NCC BOOTH NO. 1742 SORD COMPUTER SYSTEMS INC. Shinko Bldg., 1-8 Muromachi Nihonbashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 103, Japan Phone: o3 (279) 2008 Booth No. 2446 RELA INC. -1322 Arapahoe,Boulder, Colorado80302 Jay Schumacher Tel: (303)443-3311 Rela Designs provides operating system software (MSOS and RT/MSOS) and peripheral interfaces for Data General Computers. These products are available either as components or as complete computer systems. Interfaces include magnetic tape, flexible disc, and printers All are fully supported by Rela Designs Software. 2 ' 12 S«=.on ° „,!f . " Box 24064,' Minneapolis, Minnesota 55424 o R. M. Deegan Tel: (612)941-3300 Teleray CRT Terminals. 800thN01664 S?n ELEPTRnMIM INr vis„ ,„ « , 91609 ,» P.O. Box 3997 North Hollywood, California S. L. Thomas Tel: (213) 765-2645 A complete line of high performance data displays (6" CRT through 23" CRT). Both free standing and chassis only (for OEM terminal interface). Featuring 10", 12", and 14" standard chassis Booth No. 1250, 1252 CE A C SSOI!!,ES C RPORATION 970 Kings u, Highway West, Southport, Conn. 06490 Clint Baye Tel: (203) 255-1526 11 e hibiting a digitizer, the with various interfaces and output devices. Also on display will be a communications coupler which changes any parallel TTL data into serial ASCII S ! ° * 60 for transmission to RS 232-compatible devices or current-loop tape devices. Booth No. 2143 SCIENCE RESEARCH INC. 1540 Page Mill Road, Palo Alto, California 94304 Burt Gabriel Tel: (415) 493-4700 °n display are texts that SRA has published in the Computer Computing, Data Processing and Business/Management areas. They include such best sellers as PRINCIPLES OF BUSINESS by Dock and EsDATA sick, and INFORMATION SYSTEMS by Mader and Hagin. These college oriented texts, many of which are suitable as inservice learning materials as well reflect SRA's rigorous standards of quality Booth No. 2646, 2648 SHINKO p/. a rnmn-, nu e Company Avenue, 200 Park New York, NewYork 10017 Mi Kawate Tel: (212) mm Shinko Serial Impact Printer. '° iihLi * Booth No. 2660, 2662 SHINSHU SEIKI LTD. 2990 W. Lomila Boulevard, Torrance, Calif. 90505 Norio Niwa Tel: (213) 530-6955 SHINSHU a large manufacturer of mini digital printers mainly for electronic printing calculators, will display computer peripheral equipment especially for mini computers. Line Printer, Mi- cro Drum Memory, Paper Tape Puncher, Mark Card Reader, etc.—all these products are newly developed for OEM man- ufacturers. Personnel will be available to discuss and to demonstrate this equipment. . Booth No. 2704, 2706 A SSO lATES ?«? J?" , P . y Sunnvvale' California 94086 35 ' Tel: (408) 733-0100 «. FerrellSanders The SA9OO/901 Diskette (floppy disk) Storage Drives featuring high reliability, durect access and storage for 3.1 million blts of data Per unit The SA9OO is IBM compatible and uses the IBM or equiv- * ' - alent diskette. The SA9OO/901 Drives are used ln key data entTy< source data recording, word processing, small business a ccounting systems and minicomputer applications. The SA9O2 Dual Diskette Drive which is IBM Compatible providing dual volume access featuring independent R/W heads and random accessibilitv of data Storage ranaritv is R 2 m^^T'O^lS^ e'conom an ical diskeUe stQrage subsystem which may include from one to eight SA9OO Diskette Drives unves. Booth No. 2357 2359 SINGER Terminal and Communication Cosby Manor Road, Utica, New York 13502 R. M. Umar Tel: (315) 797-5750 Singer Series 1500 Intelligent Terminal System is a combination of hardware software and peripherals presently installed and marketed worldwide solving customer applications and requirements There are new PINCOMM Standards for SPC-16 core memory. They are the Standard Memories Model ABKI6MM (16K bytes) and AI6KI6MM (32K bytes) memory systems. They are completely pin-compatible with your SPC-16 mainregardless of the sub-model you may have installed. In addition, the new Standards will increase your reliability and save you money (ask for an immediate price quotation). Besides, they're available, either from stock or for shipment within 30 days. Incidentally, we also offer new 16K byte Standardsfor your SPC-18. Mention your mainframe and we'll send you the specs! ANAPPLIED MAGNETICS COMPANY 2801 £ Oakland Park BWd Fl Lauderdale. Florida 33306 Telephone (305) 566-7611 TWX 510-955-9828 »"#»#« SEE US AT NCC — nnriTU BOOTH 2304 ton* Word Processing Terminals _ < Jk ' " Van San QUIETIZERS are covers that fit overyour business machines and insulate you from the noise. The only difference you'll notice is quiet. And Van San makes a Quietizer for practically every business machine and data processing terminal. ... Van San Corporation WW 1180Centre Drive " City of Industry, California 91748 " (714) 595-7487 " Telex 67-0320 Terminals are available in different size, capability and configuration. Different levels of application and system software includes application generator, communication generator to enable rapid installation and debugging of system at user's level. For additional information contact Singer Company. Booth No. 2655 SOFTWARE AG 11800 Sunrise Valley Drive, Reston, Virginia 22091 Thomas R. Berrlslord Tel: (703) 620-9577 ADABAS— the Adaptable DAta BAse Systern-is an flexible and powerful generalized data base management system (DBMS). ADABAS provides host report and query language generator capability, data-program independence, complete data protection and data security, concurrent on-line and batch processing, and operating system and teleprocessing system compatibility. ADABAS permits the creation of complex hierarchic and network structures without extensive redesign or reprogramming of existing systems and requires minimal training. ADABAS data compression, inverted file design, and sophisticated buffer management make it the most effective DBMS to install and to operate. Visit Us Booth No. 1742 SORD COMPUTER INC. Shlnko Building 8, Nihombashl-Muromachl Tokyo, 103 Japan 1-chome, Takayoshl Shiina Tel: Tokyo (03) 279-2008 SORD supplies system software complete at Booth No. 1254 with microcomputer modules for OEM applications. Microcomputer systems, models available SMP-80/05 Micro CPU single "Board Only" module; SMP-80/10 (Basic Processor Unit) can be provided with or without Intel's 8080 chip and with or — without 4K RAM SMP-80/20 with floppy disk and CRT runs under floppy disk OS. Data entry equipment— Pen input tablet senses the data position. Data output equipment—Printer, tape. Rli i "» rnuD.uv L ., SlSrVi??r"ch^- £ f? °* f^f* *hlc^ £ of acoustic foams and noise control matenals for se lnside machine and equipF, ea urlng M DAMPING which consists of a n acoustic foam b nded to a*« sheet of Pre ed hlgh /"F efficiency damping compound. The damp"% compound eliminates enclosure vibrabons as the foam soaks up ambient n lse die-cut to complicated in thickness from hapes and fV to w .available pressure senth or ? sltlve adhesiv«- ° - * ****** * crated line printer "portraits" of attendees will again be on exhibit. For an encore, conversion between the 108's raster-scan input format and a vectororiented graphic output will be used to demonstrate further capabilities and to produce computer-generated sketches of visitors. Booth No. 1501, 1503 STANDARD INC. 2215 South Standard Aye., Santa Ana, Calif. 92707 Lloyd Mallory Mallory Tel: (714) 979-4770 DIP/Logic Packaging Panels. Wlre WraPPin S and Wi « Stripping m Machines. Floppy Disk Memory Systems add-on for ... H , Tc cmlnrn.-r mr v "% " ! "V R ZZiTiiZ\n* 119 rry M Chodash Tel. (212) 858-4100 , ' and demonstrating a variety !?.11*^1^ Displaying . f°* Minicomputers. Fixed Head Disk Memory Systems add-on for Minicomputers, Bnnfh Nn n 0 »M i MEMORIES INCORPORATED STANDARD „. ■"^" ,„, "j*"** i^*""* 2801 East Oakland Park Boulevard. Suite 307 «,. Fort Lauderdale, F10rid..33306 John A. DeVine Tel: (305) 566-7611 FuU range of company products will be shown and will include add on and replacement memories for IBM 360 and System 111, most popular mimcomputers as well as a full line of OEM and Stand »« 1740 Alone" ivstpm<s systems. SPATIAL DATA INC. P.O. Box 249, California 93017 Booth No. 1129 Fred Clarke Tel: (805) 967-2383 STORAGE TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION The COMPUTER EYE 108 Image Digi- 2270 S. 88th Louisville, Colorado 80027 tizerwhich caused a mild sensation at the Lynn Schwertfeger Tel: (303) 666-6581 1974 NCC by producing computer-gen- Storage Technology will exhibit its 8000 >i D-..u Booth No. 62 Teletypes r With a XeroxTelecopier transceiver and an ordinal telephone, you can send copies of letters, memos, orders, even pictures anywhere in the country in less time than it takes you to finish your morning coffee. Just put the document intothe Telecopier unit, call the place you want it to go, and minutes later an exact copy is there. , Xerox offers you threemodels to choose from: The portable Telecopier 400. The Telecopier 410, which can automatically send andreceive as many as 75 documents even when no one's there. XEROX® and TELECOPIER* ire iradcmarb XEROX information, there's the new Telecopier 200, which can automatically send documents in just two minutes or less. For more information, contact your local Xerox Telecopier sales representative, Imagine. With a Xerox Telecopier transceiver you can arrive with important information at an out-of-town office without ever leaving yours. ■*. «—r-\f\\/ /Vl l\t J/V series disk family and a 3800-IV tape control unit, a 3470 tape drive (maximum recording density of 1600 bpi at 200 ips) and a 3470 tape drive (maximum recording density of 6250 bpi at 200 ips). Booth No. 1201, 1203 SWEDA INTERNATIONAL OEM PRODUCTS 34 Maple Avenue, Pine Brook, New Jersey 07058 Jim Lundrigan Tel: (201) 575-8100 ext. 353 OEM paper/ tape edge card punches and readers. Model 30 serial impact printer. Booth No. 2547, 2549, 2551 INC. 100Phoenix Drive, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Marty Hunt Tel: (313)971-0900 Sycor presents intelligent answers to lowcost data entry the Model 340 intelligent terminal and the Sycor 250 intelligent display system. The Model 340 with its dual flexible disk option will demonstrate error-free data entry in a branch office environment. In a separate RJE configuration, the Model 340 will display its IBM 2780 capabilities. The sycor 250 system, a series of IBM 3270-compatible remote display stations, stand-alone terminals and printers, will feature userprogrammable intelligence at the source. — Booth No. 2605, 2607 SYKES INC. Rochester, NewYork 14606 375 Orchard James D. Centannl Tel: (716) 458-8000 Sykes Datatronics manufactures peripheral memory products consisting of IBM compatible Floppy Disk Systems, and Digital Cassette and Cartridge Transports and Systems. These systems include RS-232 Communications compatible equipment and interfaces for a variety of minicomputers along with complete software operating systems. Booth No. 1360, 1362 SYSTEMS FURNITURE COMPANY 2012 W. 139th California 90249 Charles Schroder Tel: (213) 327-4000 SPI Data Desks : The auxiliary desk, work station or peripheral stand. SPII Data Desks : With up to 3 electroniccabinets of 4 sizes thatfit under desk top. Data Cubes : Electronic cabinetsfor the computer room. Data Mounts : Electronic consoles to mount mag tape drives, control panels, etc. on table top. Printer Stands : Made specifically to hold many popular printers. Chairs to compliment above furniture. Booth No. 2635, 2637, 2639 TAB PRODUCTS COMPANY 2690 Hanover Palo Alto, California 94304 B. W. Rolllnson Tel: (415) 493-5790 Tab's exhibit includes its latest model buffered a quiet, 80 column machine, engineered to maximum operator comfort and efficiency. Some of Tab's powerful features include: automatic program sequencing, automatic 64 of constant "hands off" error correction in verify mode, and visualproduction statistics unit. Tab will also exhibit card, tape and disk pack entry storage products. the booth. Booth No. 1539 TALLY CORPORATION Kent, Washington 98031 8301 South 180th Robert E. Maddy Tel: (206)251-6773 Highlighting the Tally Corporation display of medium speed line printers and paper tape products will be the introduction of 300 and 400 line per minute impact printers. The new machines represent an extension of their present 2000 series product line that utilizes the unique comb matrix print technology. New paper tape readers and perforators will be on hand, as well as a demonstration of the Datascribe data communications remote batch terminal. Booth No. 1350, 1352 TALOS INC. 7311 East Evans Road, Arizona 85260 Peter J. Shaw Tel: (602) 948-6540 Cybergraphic Data Tablets and Digitizers, sizes range from an lT'xll" to 48"x 60". Closed-loop electronic servo operahigh accuracy, tion Unique repeatability, versatility, and reliability. Interfaces to mini computers, EIA RS 232 Teletype, magnetic and paper tape, cards, available. Telenote written communications transmit handwriting, sketches, schematics over ordinary telephone lines instantly. Ideal for portable communica- — — — tions. Booth No.2361 TAURUS CORPORATION Academy Hill, Lambertville, New Jersey 08530 John Kreuter Tel: (609) 397-2390 Serial Card Readers for Heavy Duty Industrial Use. More than 168 options available slow specd with or without hopper feed. Also Static Card Readers for heavy duty industrial use. Also PC Board — of computer and peripheral equipment cards. Series 2000 Computer-Controlled Logic Card Testers and Series 1000 Memory Exercisers. Demonstrations of Fault-Isolationroutines are performed in — Guides. Booth No. 2712 TEC, INCORPORATED 9800 North Oracle Road, Tucson, Arizona 85704 C. I. Anderson Tel: (602) 297-1111 NEW Model 4400 DATA-SCREEN terminal, a user programmable, micro-processor controlled intelligent terminal will be introduced. Up to 2000 upper and lower case ASCII characters are presented in a variety of display techniques. Will also demonstrate NEW Model 1440 Booth No. 1417 INC. P.O. Box 500, Beaverton, Oregon 97077 Kevin Van Hoomissen Tel: (503) 292-261 1ext. 21 1 Tektronix willbe displaying its full range of graphic computer terminals, peripheral products, and calculator-based system. Being shown are the large screen graphic display terminals, the 4014-1 and 4015-1. Both units are compatible with the 4631 Hard Copy Unit on display. Flexible Disc Memory, Model 4922 and the 30" x 40" Graphic Tablet,Model 4954, will be shown, as will a wide range of calculator based instrumentation systems. Booth No. 1111, 1113 TELEFILE COMPUTER INC. Irvine, California92705 17131 Daimler Kent Wentworth Tel: (714) 557-6660 Telefile provides disk file systems featuring disk controllers to interface large, moving-head, 2314 and 3330 type disk drives to non-IBM computers; front-end processors for IBM 360/370 systems; data concentrators and store-and-forward systems; and a growing selection of peripherals for XDS Sigma computers. Featured at the Telefile booth is the new DC-16-C Disk Controllerwhich interfaces Telefile storage modulesand Trident-type disk drives to most mini-computers, including those manufactured by Honeywell, Interdata, Data Lockheed and Microdata. Booth No. 1205 TELENET COMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION 1666 X Street N.W., Suite 500, Wash., D.C. 20006 Stuart L Mathison/Barry D. Wessler Tel: (202) 785-8444 Telenet provides to the public advanced data communications services on a common carrier basis. The company's network is based upon packet switching technology and utilizes transmission facilities leased from established common carriers. Booth No. 1617 TELETYPE CORPORATION 5555 Touhy Avenue, Illinois 60076 Leonard S.Zaw Tel: (312) 982-3115 Booth No. 2451 TENNECOMP SYSTEMS, INC. TELE-TEC TTY replacement terminal, 795 Oak Ridge Turnpike, Oak Ridge, Term. 37830 lowest cost 24 line CRT display available. Bob Green Tel: (615) 482-3491 Will demonstrateModel 2400 MINI-TEC 3M cartridge tape unit systems interterminal, a low cost general purpose buf- faced to minicomputers. Called the Datafered and conversational mode terminal Pacer. that offers many display/interface feaBooth No. 1718 tures found only in higher priced terTERMIFLEX CORPORATION minals. P.O. Box 1123, 17 Airport Road Nashua, New Hampshire 03060 Booth No. 1149 TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED William J. Turner Tel: (603) 889-3883 3191 -D Airport Loop Dr., Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 TERMIFLEX is displaying its exciting JanW.Bosboom Tel: (714)979-1100 product line of hand-held interactive TECHNOLOGY INCOR- computer terminals weighing 1.5 lbs. PORATED is displaying the most efficient The HT/1 and HT/2 terminals provide toolsfor production test and depot service full ASCII keyboard capability, solid state display of the entire ASCII character set, (including lower case and control characters) and a 1000 character display which can be reviewed through a 20 character display window. These highly mobile interactive terminals connect to your computer system through existing hardware channels provided for teletypewriter. An acoustic coupler/power supply/carrying case weighing 3.5 lbs. is also available. Booth No. 2312 TESDATA SYSTEMS CORPORATION 7900 Westpark Drive, McLean, Virginia 22101 H. J. Stewart Tel: (703) 790-5580 Tesdata Systems will show a complete line of cost saving computer performance measurement systems and scheduling systems. On exhibit will be the most advanced synergestic hardware monitors which have already helped produce savings in excess of $10,000,000 for Tesdata customers. Software systems will be displayed which provide important capabilities in meeting work schedules, determining increased workload impact, controlling operating costs and providing computer performance prediction. Booth No. 1102 TIME-LIFE BOOKS 1950 S. LaCienega Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif. 90034 William W. Kresln Tel: (213) 870-6081 All 215 titles of all 15 series of TIMELIFE BOOKS will be on display for examination. Series include: LIFE SCIENCE LIBRARY, LIBRARY OF PHOOLD WEST EMERGENCE OF MAN, GREAT FOODS OF WORLD, etc. Booth No. 2620 TIMEPLEX 100 CommerceWay, Hackensack, New Jersey 07601 Jesse Rosenzweig Tel: (201) 646-1155 installs Timeplex designs, and services equipment and systems whichreduce the cost of communications between computers and between computers and remote terminals, overdomestic, foreign and international telephone systems. The principal product lines are multiplexers, modems, automatic dialers, test sets and concentrators. The display will consist of one or more products from each principal product line. Booth No. 2345, 2347 TOKYO JUKI INDUSTRIAL LTD. 23,Kabukicho, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan Tokyo Tel: 03-203-8241 ext. 262 Model 1514 Buffered Key Punch, Model 2603 Card Reader, Model 3100 Photo Engraver System, Model 5701 Serial Printer, Model JRP-100/JRP-110 Digital Printer Mechanism. Booth No. 2218, 2220 TOPAZ ELECTRONICS 3855 Ruffin Road, San Diego, California 92123 Gerald P. Williams Tel: (714) 279-0831 Power Conversion Equipment, Uninterruptible Power Systems (UPS), AC line Regulators Ultra-Isolation Frequency Changers and Inverters. Booth No. 2200, 2202 TRI-DATA CORPORATION 800 Maude Aye., Mountain View, California 94043 Allen Sanders Tel: (415) 969-3700 FlexiFile 52 flexible disk system with controller and interface to popular minicomputers. Features two or four drives, full software support packages. Model 211 fixed platter moving arm disk with dual cartridge mag tape system utilizing one controller through single I/O Channel. Software operating systems and drivers for PDP-11 computers. FlexiFile 10 paper tape emulator utilizing flexible disk media. Features read/write capability, fast transfer rates, low cost. Plug compatible with most readers and Booth No. 2558, 2560 INC. 10100 Bubb Road, Cupertino, California 95014 Carl V. Larson Tel: (408) 257-9900 ext. 40 High speed electrostatic printers and plotters for computer hard copy output will be shown. One can see continuous demonstrations of both on-line and offLine printing and plotting. Samples of graphs and charts prepared by Versaplot software will be given to interested visitors. Technical personnel will be available to discuss Versatec Controllers (interfaces) for on-line operation of Versatec electrostatic printers and plotters with over 30 different computer Booth No. 1209 TRUE DATA CORPORATION 2701 South Halladay, Santa Ana, California 92705 Donna Felger Tel: (714) 979-4842 Optical Data Reader, Series 1reads either punched, marked, or punched/marked intermixed cards. Series 1 features single motion transport, speeds of 200 to 1000 cpm, self-diagnostic fault detection/display and fiber optic self-cleaning read station. The hand single card reader with 100 card output stacker reads either punched or marked cards. Comes complete with cabinet electronics or as a mechanical deck only. Booth No. 2267 UNIVERSAL DATA INC. 2611 Leeman Ferry Rd., Huntsville, Alabama35805 George R. Grumbles Tel: (205) 533-4500 Modems —Up through and including 2400 BPS. DeskTop Modems, rack mount modems both multichannel and single channel, OEM Printed Circuit Board Booth No. 2557 VOCAL INTERFACE DIVISION OF FEDERAL SCREW WORKS 500 Stephenson Highway, Troy, Michigan 48084 Max D. Bishop Tel: (313) 588-2050 VOTRAX VS-6 Electronic Voice System. A small solid-state, electronic voice synthesizer with unlimited vocabulary capability. Available with a variety of interface options including EIA. Synthesizes human speech from ASCII data input at rates as low as 150 Baud. Output may be sent over telephone, radio, P.A. or other medium. Can be used with ASCII terminals or other standard communications equipment for all types of time- punches. Modems. Booth No. 1210, 1212 U. S. POSTAL SERVICE Washington, D.C. 20260 K. W. Diehl Tel: (202) 245-5766 Express Mail and Mailgram are two items our exhibit will depict. Booth No. 2650 A Division of Tymshare, Inc. 31355 W. Agoura Rd., Westlake Village, Calif. 91361 John K. Cool Tel: (213) 889-6031 Display of refurbishment processes for increasing the longevity of EDP equipment life. Booth No. 1254 VAN SAN CORPORATION 1180 Centre Drive, City of Industry, Calif. 91748 J. Vanlandingham Tel: (714) 595-7487 Noise Control Covers Quietizers for noisy data and word processing terminals, printers, teletypewriters and typewriters will be demonstrated. More than 150 models available. Sales and engineering personnel will be avaiable to discuss quietizing any business machine. OEM and dealer programs available. Booth No. 2615 VECTOR GENERAL, INC. 21300 Woodland Hiis, California 9l364 Goeff Taylor Tel: (213) 346-3410 Interactive graphic terminals, systems and peripherals. — — systems. sharing applications. Booth No. 1517 WANGCO INCORPORATED 5404 Jandy Place, Los Angeles, California 90066 George Toor Tel: (213) 390-8081 Wangco will be showing and operating full line of tape and disc drives. Tape drives include recently announced Mod 1200 featuring completely automatic tape loading. Disc drives include frontand top-loading removable cartridge models with 100 tpi and 200 tpi capability. New series-N disc drive being shown. Has 2 fixed discs and features 100 megabit capacity. Booth No. 1758, 1760 INC. PUBLISHERS 605 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10016 Karen Hutcheson Tel: (212) 867-9800 Books and texts in computer science and other related fields. JOHN WILEY & Booth No. 1720 WILSON LABORATORIES, INC. 2536-0 Fender Avenue, Fullerton, California 92631 Randall Wilson Tel: (714) 992-0410 1) PDP-11 data cartridge system using 3m media. 2) RS232C data cartridge system using 3m media. 3) Tape and disc drive portable testers. 4) PDP-11 paper tape system. Booth No. 1329 XEROX CORPORATION—Data Systems Division 9920 LaCienega Blvd., Inglewood, California 90301 Robert A. Burks Tel: (213) 679-4511 ext. 7259 Presentations and demonstrations of the five concurrent processing modes of the Xerox multi-use operating system, CP-V (Control Program Five) — time sharing. 65 remote batch (terminal job entry), transaction processing, local batch and real time. The Xerox 1200 Computer Printing System, demonstrating improved computer output processing through highspeed, off-line xerographic printing onto BV2" x 11" paper. Booth No. 2453 ZENTEC CORPORATION California 95050 2390 Walsh Avenue, Santa Dennis J. Daniels Tel: (408) 246-7662 Zentec will display and demonstrate its line of intelligent terminals and associated peripherals. Featured will be the 9002 user programmable terminal, dual floppy disk, and printer. Zentec will demonstrate various software packages including extended text editor, disk cataloger and disk assembler. Booth No. 1314 ZETA RESEARCH, INC. 1043 Stuart Street, Lafayette, California 94549 Conrad B. Vance Tel: (415) 284-5200 12 inch and 36 inch high speed remote digital incrementalplotters. PRODUCT Spatial Data Systems, Inc Tesdata Product classifications were provided by the exhibnor NEWSWEEK iting companies and neither bears any responsibility the same. Printing lead-times this GUIDE together with last minute changes on the part of the exhibitor in his display plans discrepancies. account Where exhibitors did not provide this information they are not listed. COMPUTER SYSTEMSSPECIAL PURPOSE American Videonetics Corp American Videonetics Corp BDT Buro-und Datentechnik GMBH Design Electrical Products Corp. Cherry 2719, 2721,2723, 2725 Clinton Electronics Corp Control Data Corp 1310 2441 2261 Tesdata U Inc. . .2722, 2724 1218 2601 1220 1220 .T»k Monroe. The Calculator Co Display Products Nortronics Company, Inc .„„ Owens-Illinois, Inc Pro-Log Corp Seiki Co.', Ltd.' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' 2343 2720 1347 1641 2400 2550 2662 Milacron, Process Corporation Monroe. The 2342 1221 Cincinnati Data 100 Datapoint Corp Datum, Inc Fabri-Tek, Inc Floating Process Controls Div. 2447 2321 1651 2316 1124 Point Systems, Inc Automation, Inc Harris Corp Hewlett-Packard Corp Intel Corp Interdata, Inc Keronix, Inc Douglas Electronics Co Megadata Computer & Communications McDonnell 1643 1339 1317 1437 1159 2256 2337 2563 2600 Modular Computer Systems, Monroe, The Inc Co Ontel Corp Prime Computer, Inc Inc Communications Sord Computer Systems, Inc Xerox Corp-Data Systems Div. '.'. ...... Network Analysis Corp 2224 Quantum Science Corp 2625 Rela Designs, Inc Tesdata Systems Corp 2446 2312 DATA COMMUNICATIONS Systems, Inc Anderson Jacobson, Inc 1251. 1253. 1255 2645 American Telephone & Telegraph Co Applied Computing Technology, Inc Applied Data Communications Applied Digital Data Systems, Inc Astrocom Corp Atlantic Research Corp 2421 2500 2342 2332 1248 1465 Beehive Terminals 1553 California Computer Inc 1447 1521,1724 Centronics Data- Computer Corp Milacron, Process Controls Div. 2447 1405 Codex Corp Computer Inc 2656 Computer Inc 1217 1167 Comtal Corp 1267 2462 Cooke Engineering Co 2321 Data 100 Corp Datapoint Corp 1649. 1651 2617 Data Rentals/ Inc 2652 Decision Data Computer Corp Delta Data Systems Corp 2720 2746 Digi-Log Systems, Inc 2320 1460 1468 1124 1339 1567 1317 1437 1505 1159 1722 2360 2359 1742 . .1329 COMPUTER SYSTEMS—HYBRID Pro-Log Corp 1707 2718,2720 Datatype Corp 2338 1358 .2550 2446 Pro-Log Corp Rela Designs, Inc Singer Company, Terminal 2502 2149 1529 Corp Melco USA, Inc 1563 1667 2441 1551 2643 4J Inc Monroe, The Action Communication COMPUTER SYSTEMS—DIGITAL Applied Data Communications Basic Timesharing, Inc 2550 2446 2312 1317 Arcus ' lnc Boein 9 Computer Control Data C °'P Datapro Research Corp Design Inc uesi 9n Aias lnc ' Corp A International Data Modern Data Inc 1317 2720 Co »mm» 1117 2720 1667 , Controls Div. 2447 1317 Corporation 2643 1643 1339 2125 2441 » rftNQM OUIM&ULTINr I llMta Pm COMPUTER SYSTEMS—ANALOG Harris Inc Control Data Corp Harris Corp COMPUTER LEASING Harris Systems Corp Boeing Computer 2444 1242 2256 Farrand Controls Intel Corp Key Tronic Corp Licon Illinois Tool Lipps, Inc Magnusonic Devices, Inc Mag-Tek, Inr Inc Inc COMPUTER TIME RENTAL Electronic Memories & Magnetics Corp Div. 2447 Floating Point Systems, Inc General Automation Inc IMLAC Corp Megadata Computer & Communications Corp 1115, Monroe, The 2718, Co Pro-Log Corp Rela Designs, Inc 2716 2651 . 2716 Milacron, Process COMPONENTS Micro 66 1740 2312 Systems Corp INDEX 2550 Fabri-Tek, Inc Inc Electric Harris Corp Hewlett-Packard ICC/Milgo Incoterm Corp Informer, Inc Interface Technology, Inc Megadata Computer & Communications 1115,1117 Corp 2720 The Calculator Company at the National Computer Conference, Anaheim, Calif. May 19-22, Booth 2660 5.59" diameter 2.63" height 4 lbs. Total storage capacity: 200,000 bits max Average access time: 10 Msec. In addition, we will be displaying our card reader, paper tape puncher and reader, line printers, and liquid crystal display panel. EPSON AMERICA, INC. Shinshu SeikiCo.,Ltd. 2990 W. Lomita Blvd., Torrance, Ca. 90505 (213) 530-6533 (213) 775-8258 Nagano " " Tokyo Ontel Corp Prime Computer, Inc Printronix, Inc RCA Service Technical Services Science Accessories Corp Singer Co.—Terminal & Communication Sweda International OEM Products Sycor, Inc Sykes Datatronics, Inc Tally Corp TEC, Inc Tektronix, Inc Telefile Computer Products, Inc Tesdata Systems Corp 2746 2338 1358 1703 1252 2359 1203 2551 2607 1539 2712 1417 1113 2312 2620 2267 . Timeplex Universal Data Systems, Inc Vocal Interface Div. of Federal Screw Works Wilson Inc 2557 1720 . . 1124 1242 .2718, 2720 1147 1252 2357, 2359 2359 1417 pniIPATIDW Society) Data 1561 1667 2364 2617 Inc Inc 1744 Services, Inc Modern Data Modern Data Services, Inc 1705, 1707 Pro-Log Corp Time-Life Books Vocal Interface Div of Federal Screw Works ~M^^y,oLCJ^fLC 2550 1102 2557 " E Inc Ampex Corporation Applied Digital Data Systems, Inc Ball Brothers Research Corp Hewlett-Packard Hughes Aircraft Co ICC/Milgo IMLAC Corp Incoterm Corp Informer Corp Intel Interface Technology, Inc 68 — 2149 1347 A 2746 2400 1429 1147 1132 2355 2446 1664 2551 2712 1417 1617 1329 PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENT Ampex Corp 1421 2645 2342 2342 1447 Anderson Inc ADDlied Applied Data Data Communications Communications California Computer Products, Inc Canon USA, Inc Data Products CiDher Data Cipher Products 2426 2428 2428 2621 Computer-Link Corp Computer Operations, Inc Control Data Corp corp PerSci. Pertec .„ ...IncEngineering, Inc Inc Redactron Corp p | Desians. Inc Designs, Inc Rela Tri-Data Corp Wangco, Inc Wilson Tally Corp Taurus Corp 2706 1503 2304 2607 1417 1113 Inc 1517 California Computer Glaser Data Co Gould Inc. Inc . Hewlett-Packard Houston Instrument Logic Systems The Calculator Co Tektronix. Inc Inc Inc Inc 1447 1258 1748 1750 1750 1437 1437 2717 2101 2720 1417 1417 2558,2560 ..1746 — PERIPHER, PERIPHERAL PRINTERS Inc 2607 1417 1517 1720 Applied Technology, Computing Technology, Applied Computing B 1421 2332 1547 1553 1310 2656 1167 1267 2441 2552 1141 1651 1460 1468 1437 1663 1505 2125 1159 1722 2256 2360 PERIPHERAL MEMORY SYSTEMS .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'..... '.2629 Ampex Corp Applied Data Communications California Computer Inc Computer Operations, Inc Control Data Corp Data 100 OEM Sales Data Inc Dataram Corp Inc Diablo Systems, Inc Digital Development Corp Electronic Memories & Magnetics Corp Inc Farrand Controls, Inc General Instrument Corp Harris Corp Innovex Corp Intel Corp Inc The Calculator Company 1421 1242 1466 1317 .. 2742 2256 2563 2720 . — Bell & Howell Co Data 100 OEM Sales Data Specialties, Inc Decision Data Computer Corp A Division of Jamesbury Corp. Inc EECO .. 2328 2321 2265 2320 .2647 1348 2261 2738 1317 2629 2250 Peripheral Dynamics, Inc Sweda International OEM Products 1539 2361 1417 Inc Juki Industrial Co. Ltd Tri-Data Corp True Data Corp Wilson Laboratories, Inc Tokyo 2347 2200, 2202 1209 1720 PUBLISHERS Addison Wesley Publishing Benwill Publishing Corp COMPUTER DECISIONS PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENT— PLOTTERS PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENT PUNCH & READ mm 1129 Inc 2662 2444 1124 1429 2356 1306 2355 2446 2446 Raymond Facit-Addo, Inc Harris Corp Okidata Corp 2342 1447 1263 2441 2321 1356 1262 2316 1461 1100 2658 2658 Inc 1447 Inc Pertec Rela Designs, Inc Shinsu Seiki Co. Ltd Shugart Associates Standard Logic, Inc Standard Inc Sykes Datatronics, Inc Inc Telefile Computer Tri-Data Corp Wangco, Inc 1155 2629 2658 1429 2446 2645 Inc 2500 Applied Digital Data Systems, Inc 2332 BDT BDT Buro-und Buro-und Datentechnik Datentechnik GMBH GMBH . .2649. 2651 2651 Canon Inc 2661.2663 Canon USA. Inc 2663 Corp Centronics Data uenrronics uata Computer uorp 1724 1724 Computer Inc Computer Link Corp 2619,2621 Control Data Corp 2441 Data 100 OEM Sales 2321 Data Printer Corp 1656 Diablo Systems, Inc 1461 Di/An Controls. Inc 1119 Di/An Inc 1119 Digital Associates Corp 1665 Inc 2738 General Electric Co 1567 Inc 1750 Harris Com. . 1317 Harris Corp 1317 Hewlett-Packard Hewlett-Packard 1437 1437 Hydra Corp nyara oorp z/iu 2710 Inc 1513 Inc 2337 Intermec 1264 Mag-Tek, Inc 1220 Unnrnn Th ralrnlator 9718 The Calculator Co 2720 . 2629 okidata Corp CorD Okidata Inc Practical Inc 1358 Qume Corp 1619,1621,1623,1625 RCA Service Co. Technical Services 1703 Rela Designs, Inc 2446 Shinsu Seiki Co. Ltd 2662 Sord Computer Systems 1742 Sweda International OEM Products 1203 Tally Corp 1539 Tokyo Juki Industrial Co. Ltd 2347 Versatec, Inc 2560 Xerox Corp 1329 1117 2417 Nippon Peripherals Ltd Okidata Corp Anderson 2441 Data Electronics, Inc 1356 Datum. Inc 2316 Inc 2316 Diai-Data Corp Cora 1139 Digi-Data 1139 z/jo, W3B Inc 2738 Genisco Technology Corp 1364 Interdyne Co 1312 International Computer Inc 1133 Kennedy Co 2117 Megadata Computer & Communications Inc CRT DISPLAYS Datapoint Corp Delta Data Systems Corp Digi-Log Systems, Inc . Inc. lecnnoiogy corp Storage Technology Corp Inc Sykes oyses dediduedii ■Mmunn EQUIPMENT PEHIPHEHAL Beehive Terminals Clinton Electronics Corp Computer Communications, Inc Comtal Corp Conrac Control Data Corp Inc Datamedia Corp Ontel Corp Owens-Illinois, Inc Pertec Princeton Electronic Ramtek Corp Redactron Corp Rela Designs, Inc SC Inc Sycor, Inc Inc Inc Teletype Corp Xerox Corp storage SERVICES California Computer Eastman Kodak Company Inc Inc.— Display Products American Videonetics Corp 1167 2265 AKin TRAIMIMr EUUUAMUN ANU I HAININIa Anaheim Publishing Co Boeing Computer Services, Inc COMPUTER Magazine (lEEE Computer 2348 Corp Melco MAG. TAPE SYSTEMS wx/PRQinw FnniDMrMT n ata EQUIPMENT UA IA rn L-UNVEHbION Comtal Corp Data Specialties, Inc Inc Fabri-Tek, Inc Farrand Controls, Inc Gould Inc The Calculator Company .... Princeton Electronic Inc. Recortec, Inc Science Accessories Corp Singer Co., Terminal and Communication Inc Lear Siegler, Inc. EID Megadata Computer & Communications Inc 1247 2543, 2545 1603 2663 Computer Design Publishing Corp COMPUTER Magazine (lEEE Computer 2364 Society) 2300,2302 2302 COMPUTERWORLD 2708 DATA COMMUNICATIONS DATAMATION 1206 Datapro Research Corp 1551 Data Processing Digest 2222 Inc EDN Magazine Magazine ELECTRONIC NEWS INFOSYSTEMS Magazine/Hitchcock Publishing Co International Data Corp McGraw Hill Book Co Inc Modern Data Petrocelli/Charter Petrocelli/Charter Prentice Inc Time-Life Books John Wiley & Inc 1744 1365 1302 1116 2502 2562 1667 2643 Inc 2417 1317 International Mathematical Statistical Libraries Network Analysis Corp Rela Designs, Inc Computer Systems, Inc Sord Computer Tesdata Systems Corp Inc . ___._... 1316 2224 2446 1742 2312 2560 SOURCE DATA COLLECTION Cincinnati Milacron—Process Controls 2447 Division ata 100 2321 100 Corp Corp Data Data 1354. 1356 Electronics, Inc Data Electronics. 1356 Inc Datanoint 1649. 1651 1651 Datapoint Corn. Corp . Design 2643 Inc 1437 Hewlett-Packard Interface 2360 Technology, Inc Interface Technology, Inc 1264 Intermec International Cnmnuter Inc 1133 International Computer Products. Inc 1220 1220 Mag-Tek, Inc Monroe The Calculator ComDanv ...2718.2720 The Calculator Company Corp Ontel Corp 2746 Panasonic/ anasonic/ Matsushita Electric Corp. of 2349, 2351 America Singer Co., Terminal & Communication 1742 Sord Computer Systems, Inc A. k Sycor, Inc SUPPLIES & ACCESSORIES .ir Chapman Static r.h.nm^n R. Fliminatnr* The Portland Co Computer-Link Corp TEST Itbl 2441 2263 2265 1123 1244, 1246 2362 1455 2639 2560 2110 2619, 2621 Deltec Corp. POWER CONVERSION & LINE CONDITIONING EQUIPMENT Digi-Log Systems, Inc. CUSTOM PORTABLE CRT'S Eastman Kodak Co. COMPUTER OUTPUT MICROFILMER AC Manufacturing Co. COMPUTER ROOM AIR CONDITIONING EQUIPMENT EECO LUUIKMtNT Atlantic Research Corp CRU Glaser Data Co Inc Micro Systems, Inc The Calculator Co Programmed Inc 1465 2263 1258 1722 1238 2720 1211, 1213 2550 Pro-Log Corp Recortec, Inc Technology Marketing, Inc 1149 1417 2312 1720 Inc Tesdata Systems, Inc Wilson Inc TIME I "t fcHAHIIMIi SHARING btHVIUEb SERVICES 1667 Boeing Computer Services, Inc Control Data Corp 2441 2617 1317 Data Rentals/Sales, Inc Harris Corp OTHER Action Systems, Inc. Action Communication Communication Systems, Inc. LONG DISTANCE LONG DISTANCE VOICE VOICE COMMUNICATION COMMUNICATION CONTROL SYSTEM-WATSBOX Ampex Corp. PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENTdisk systems 1421 Anderson Inc. PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENT—TERMINALS .2645 The Ansul Co. FIRE PROTECTION EQUIPMENT Inc. OFF-SITE VITAL RECORDS PROTECTION .1563 Ben & Howell Co. -TO-TAPE DEVICES; MARK SENSINU MAHK SENSING OPTICAL OPTICAL CHARACTER RECOGNITION EQUIPMENT 2328 Cal-Tronix Privacy Systems DATA PRIVACY PRIVACY SYSTEMS SYSTEMS 2108 2108 Caracteres Inc. TYPES 2641 Centronics Data Computer Corp. TELEPRINTERS lELEPRINTERS 1724 Clinton Electronics Corp. Corp. clinton Electronics CATHODE CATHODE RAY RAY TUBES TUBES 1310 Computer Communications, Inc. Computer Inc. COMMUNICATIONS PROCESSORS 2656 Computer Inc. THERMAL OEM khin PRINTER i Et ' hehmal uem Magazine COMPUTER umEn 2141 2244 1102 1760 SOFTWARE SERVICES Boeing Computer Design Inc Eastman Kodak Co Harris Corp Control Data Corp CRU Data Specialties, Inc E. I. dv Pont de Nemours & Co Graphic Controls Corp KYBE Corp 3M Corp Inc Tab Products Co Versatec, Inc . Computer Society) (lEEE Society) lEfcE Computer * PROFESSIONAL PROFESSION DEVELOPMENT Corp. Comtal Corp. iMAft KHUOts^iiNU. IMAGE PROCESSING SYSTEMS contact Systems, inc. Contact systems, Inc. WIHt "P MACHINE WIRE W WRAP MACHINE AND AND SERVICE SERVICE Continental Information Systems IBM DEALER/ BROKER/LEASING Control Data Corp. ENUINEEHINU ENGINEERINGS & ARCHITECTURAL SERVICES AHCHIIECrUHAL SERVICES Data 100 Corp. COMPUTER TERMINALS COMPUTER TERMINALS Datatype Corp. Corp. Datatype DATA ENTRY SYSTEMS Comtal ...... 2555 1468 2417 1363 WIRE-WRAP CARDS & WIRING & 2261 DOCUMENTATION SERVICE . . Emcor-lngersoll Products CABINETS & CONSOLES 1658. 1662 Inc. MICROPROCESSORS/ MICROCOMPUTERS 1124 Inc. I/O TYPEWRITERS & ADDING MACHINES 2738 E. I. Dv Pont De Nemours & Inc. FIRE PROTECTION SYSTEMS 1123 Floating Point Systems, Inc. 1643 ARITHMETIC PROCESSORS Hewlett-Packard DESK TO p CALCULATORS 1437 |n Inc. DATA ENTRY FILE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS 1513 Intel Corp. MICROCOMPUTERS 2256 Key Tronic Corp. Corp KEYBOARDS . . 1214 1216 KYBE Corp. PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENTCASSETTE TRANSPORTS 1246 , ,, . ■„„. Lipps nc MAGNETIC RECORDING HEADS' ADVANCED DESIGN DRUM/DISC, FERRITES LogAbax S.A.-U. S. Division COMPUTER HARD COPY Lorain Products C orp. UNINTERRUPTIBLE POWER SYSTEMS 3M 3M Co MAGNE RECORDING MEDIA The Magnavox Co. p, A o MA PANFI n pLA SMA PANEL DISPLAY TERMINALS Mag-Tek, Inc. 1218 .. . .2659 1756 2362 . . .2653 1220 McDonnell Douglas Electronics Co. VOICE RESPONSE/DATA ENTRY SYSTEM 2600 MDB Systems, Inc. PERIPHERAL PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENTCONTROLLERS AND GEN ERAL PURPOSE INTERFACES 2553 Okidata Corp. ALPHA NUMEF ALPHANUMERIC DISPLAYS (NON CRT) . . .2629 Inc. 1661 POWER SUPPLIES pulsion 2364 Methods Inn Precision Inc. DISK MAG TAPE, 1167 1701 SERVICE Inc. .1125 .1125 COMPRESSION COMPRESS MOLDING COMPOUNDS AND CUSTOM MOLDING SERVICES 1555 2401 Princeton Electronic Inc. 1147 GRAPHIC COMPUTER TERMINALS . Programmed Inc. 2441 2441 mmimtfrri IPTIRI F UNINTERRUPTIBLE POWER SYSTEMS 12111213 2321 p 2321 Corp. Pro - ,Log Corn MICROPROCE MICROPROCESSOR SYSTEMS 2550 2652 69 Who'd dare introduce | a data system with I FORTRAN? minal environments. much you won't care And to communicate with your what its high level language is called. 360/370, our multileaving, interData General is the company. leaving HASP emulates IBM's remote And the data system is the Eclipse" job entry workstation. C/300. The computer is the state-of-the Eclipse C/300 is an on-line, art Eclipse C/300. The one with multiterminal, interactive data system 256K byte memory capacity, a cornthat extends and complements your prehensive commercial instruction present large computer system. A set, optional Error Checking and system you can actually afford to use Correction ( ERCC ) that automatically tor dedicated operational support. for dedicated operational corrects errors in main memory, and It has a data base-oriented file support for a mammoth 700 megasystem called INFOS" that has all bytes of on-line storage, conventional the access methods: Yet a 96K byte Eclipse C/300 SAM, RAM, ISAM. Plus an unconcomputer with ten million bytes of ventional method called DBAM (Data disc, line printer, 60K CPS tape Base Access Method). drive, 2 CRT's and a synchronous DBAM has such advanced feacommunication adapter plus INFOS, tures as data base inversion, dyRPG II, FORTRAN, MRDOS, Sort namic space management, hierarand Merge, HASP and utilities costs chical key specification, partial recless than ords, generic and approximate keys, Which is a language anyone and relative position processing. should be able to understand. INFOS works with our Mapped Real-time Disc Operating System , nc v. Eclipse cU bend me the C/300 brochure. I tern that has so , j /i\/TDnnc\ i_- i_ ( MKUUb ) Which Supports dual Operations Such as multiterminal on-line activity at the same time as batch processing or direct communication to other computers. Our new, easy-to-use RPG II generates planned , ,■ L □ Send me a sales engineer. iii Send me the brochure that shows how small l operational %%£** "" j ° j NAME title and unplanned COMPANY reports. You also get our re-entrant multitasking FORTRAN with full INFOS data manipulation capabilities that make it ideal for on-line multiter- address I- I^"°.^^== TELEPHONENUMBER Data General 1 Randomex, Inc. DOS MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT Raymond Engineering, Inc. DIGITAL CASSETTE RECORDERS RCA Service Co. Technical Services MAINTENANCE SERVICE Redactron Corp. PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENT/ MAG CARD SYSTEM Science Accessories Corp. PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENTDIGITIZERS Software AG SOFTWARE PRODUCTS Sord Computer Systems, Inc. MICROCOMPUTER SYSTEM Standard Memories, Inc. OEM CORE MEMORIES Storage Technology Corp. PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENTDISK SUBSYSTEMS Systems Furniture Co. COMPUTER ROOM FURNITURE Tab Products Co. CARD PUNCH EQUIPMENT Talos Systems, Inc. ... 1455 2356 NOTES See it in action today 1703 2355 1252 2655 1742 2304 1129 1362 2639 DATA TABLETS; DIGITIZERS; VOICE GRAPHIC COMMUNICATIONS; TELEPHONE COMMUNICATIONS . . 1352 Telenet Communications Corp. DATA COMMUNICATIONS SERVICESVALUE ADDED NETWORK 1205 Tesdata Systems Corp. HARDWARE MONITORS & SCHEDULING SYSTEMS 2312 Tokyo Juki Industrial Co. Ltd. PHOTO ENGRAVER SYSTEM 2347 Topaz Electronics POWER CONVERSION EQUIPMENT. 2220 Vocal Interface Div. of Federal Screw Works 2557 VOICE RESPONSE EQUIPMENT MOTOROLA'S M6BOO FAMILY IS ON DISPLAY IN ACTIO IN OUR R00TH...N0. 1462. AND IN OUR APPLICATIONS SUITE...THE KENTUCKY ROOM OF THE ROYAL INN. Motorola's MC6BOO 8-bit microprocessor and the directly related complement of fully compatible Silicon Gate NMOS LSI devices are the first microcomputer systems family designed from wholecloth with the total system approach. Thanks to inherent concepts like the M6BOO universal bus approach and I/O that looks like memory, design cycles are in the one to six month range depending on system complexity. Finished systems are simpler. The M6BOO family now becomes the standard against which all others must be measured; the benchmark family for microcomputer systems. Here's a sampling of family highlights: ■ All basic M6BOO family devices operate from a single +5 V supply. Easy on costs, easy on the system. ■ Single bus architecture encourages ease of system expansion. ■ Word-oriented family RAMs and ROMs are specifically designed for microprocessors, yet other popular memories fit in easily and Motorola also offers a line of compatible memory interface devices. ■ The family features a set of programmable logic peripherals for I/O task management, a true set of building blocks designed for optimum parts count regardless of system application, Typical of this approach is the a unique Peripheral Interface Adapter which greatly simplifies I/O Interface. ■ The M6BOO family provides a great new look in data communications systems with its programmable and logic Communications Interface Adapters, an MC6BOO MPU instruction set designed for efficient execution of data communications. ■ M6BOO support software presently is available on G.E. and United Computing Service timesharing. Support hardware requirements are fulfilled with the M6BOO Evaluation Module and the M6BOO EXORciser* systems development tool. Documentation is comprehensive, with Educamanuals and handbooks to cover every angle. tional programs, produced both in Phoenix and selected locations around the U.S. throughout the year, provide all the individual assistance anyone needs to start designing with the M6BOO family for microcomputer systems, ■ Get the full story today. Visit our booth, No. 1462, in the Convention Center and our Applications Suite in the Kentucky Room of the Royal Inn. ■ ■ ■ fl\w& MOTOROLA M6SOO JM "Trademark 72 Motorola Inc. Benchmark family for microcomputer systems. NORTH -X- LATE ALL UP a ARE EARLY lOXIO' UNLESS SOUTH *-* HALL HALL- 1975 NATIONAL COMPUTER CONFERENCE » EXPOSITION ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ANAHEIM. CALIFORNIA MAY 19-22, 1975 - on 4-15-T4 1-4-JS I -14.71 J-IT-T5 How to plug into a half a million of your most important prospects* Executive Newsweek, the special demographic edition of Newsweek, gives you 500,000 executives with a median income of $30,000 and a minimum-income qualification of $20,000. (That's based strictly on the subscriber's personal, not household, income.) Exceptional people for any advertiser. Very exceptional prospects for data processing equipment. And the cost for this most exclusive market is just $6,500 a b&w page. Maybe that's why Executive Newsweek has already sold more than 540 pages since its inception only eight months ago. ewswee For details, contact Phil Shannon, Newsweek, 444 Madison Aye., N.Y., N.Y. 10022—(212) 350-2130. Or call your local Newsweek office fijrm Tape drier Cassstle M . unecK nease D ca AFIPS NATIONAL COMPUTER CONFERENCE Mgy 22 ig7sj Anaheim California rhort □ MCC-24 Systems M. Eastman □ NCC-4 and User Views ni kirHMiiirements D NCC -25 Banking's "Back Office Paper Problems and Approaches to Solutions Developer Ricnarau. RichardG n mTs miiis Pressing: Its Impact Upon Society Thm.^hiihnru^ttßnn Through Library bystems Susan Crowe n ° AFIPS Programs Portability and _ NCC 8 □ Computing Applied to Societal Problems Jr. Donald v NCC-11 Microprocessor Basics Rob Walker NCC-13 Electronic Funds Transfer Systems: What's In i,,Z. _ . NCC-14 Making Computers Safer 9y Chn h c Eldred Nelson J w^ln NCC-16 Data Processing Education— A View from Education- TH^tAAAAhAA, Thomas J. Cashman/ Gary B. Shelly Kirr 17 , - Microprocessors at Work PaulM.Russo NCC-18 Issues in Programming Language Design Wasserman John Q NCC-32 Making Computers Safer Through Auditing William E. Perry Q NCC-36 SPECIAL SESSION Data Processing in 1980-1985 TedDolotta NC C-37 Tutorial and Panel Discussion on Relational Data Base Management Edgar Acodd □ NCC-38 Operating Systems Theory r. Stockton Games re ADavis DNCC-78 E.ft'indstrom °ra9e r-j f\|CC-79 Advances in Packet Radio Communication Harry L. Van Trees NCC sfi The Impact Computer Interface Standards Thomas J. Alshuk SPECIAL SESSION Pioneer Day D NCC-588 rj Management Issues in Computers John J. Donovan D NCC-81 Computer System Simulation and Performance °ar * _, NCC-60 Psychological Research on the Use of Computer Languages James H. Carlisle NCC-61 Selection Techniques for Packaged Data Manage- „ ment Systems .NCC-82 .. _ ..-- ° DNCC-63 System Implications P.7„Sq^l 9 ? Data and Memory Management Architectures Je ery P Buzen " . NCC-83 Innovative Applications of Computer Science in Automation Richard L. Paul n wrr «A D NCC-84 Distributed Data Bases and Applications Eugene I. Lowenthal NCC-62 Future Trends in the Law of Computers Susan H.Nycum Evaluation Hans Kaspar _□ Harold Uhrbach » Technology Jerome H. Saltzer NCC-80 „-„ SPECIAL SESSION Part 2 Pioneer Day □ . . Performance Evaluation. Data Compression and D NCC-58A Q Architectu^ef _ NCC 77 Education Alan Kay Medical Information Systems G. Ocro Barneri jnC er oompuier in 7R Computer Science in pgQQ.^y , NCC-34 _ NOC-75c New Aopications in Printing (..«— nnovative Applications of 0 Ad a nCno,e Tec hno,o q s SPECIAL SESSION The Editors Speak Out Hesh Wiener □ n NCC-54 NCC-31 Data Base Technology in the Banking Industry Bernard K. Flagman . „ Switching , „ y,_, David C. Walden Stuart E. Madnick M^r~ c^ _ NCC 55 NCC-73 New Advances in Processor- Managing the New Programming Technologies n Q iim ->i ,-, v w Workload Characterization Kennef/r IrV. Ko/ence Roy N. Freed NCC-35 — NCC-52 DNCC-53 Sylvia Charp Future Prospects in Data Processing I Earl C.Joseph v Implementations DaWd M. Darrm — Use of Computers in Instruction °'° Relational Data Base Legal Aid for EDP Managers Computer-Related Tax,' Recordkeeping. and Labor Questions Through Aerospace Requirements Richard H.Thayer rj NCC-51 Software Engineering Thomas E.Bell "£^f Technology p£ rrVl,k iraween Anthony I. □ c Don Moehrke Microprogramming and k n U Nrr oo rts.Hay □ ° Car/os DNCC-30 □ Query Languages and Comparative Evaluation Ben Shneiderman □ NCC-50 Computer Applications in «to^Care Do Programming NCC-10 LJ The Mass Storage Impact John R. Morrison Harut Barsamian Issue RichardG. Mills n NCC-29 Microcomputer Technology Transfer: A Smouldering National □ Jr. „„„,,,= D NCC-9 NCC-15 O NCC-48 □ Computer Education for a Computerized Age /raW.Cofrorr □ Aspects F. Sherwood Lewis B NCC-28 urapnics Systems oysiema □ (jilchnst Julius A. Economics of Computer □ Through Good Practices JfflflS," Davidß.Wortman □ Making Computers Sa er D NCC-71 Innovative Applications of Computer Science in Medic.ne G. Anthony Gorry Antitrust and Regulatory future Prospects in Data fl NCC 7 □ NCC"26 Bruce PaulW.Berthiaume D NCC-47 D NCC-27 NCC fi — Ratability Jr. Watson M. iir-rc ° IffiS&on □ — Its Impact on COBOL 74 Software Engineennq Paul Oliver Physical GraDhic Models ° NCC -85 Packet Radio: Future Impact Robert E.Kahn n urn oe UNCC-86 Design and Implementation of Distributed Systems - David uavia J Farber harDer . I NCC-19 Implications and Applications of Communications-Based Systems Technology on Banking Operations Larry Dori D NCC-20 Making Computers Safer Through Licensing, Certifior Professional Responsibility Oliver R Smoot □ NCC-21 Future Prospects in Data II Processing Orrin E. Taulbee — □ Optimizing the Computer Installation Leo J. Cohen 0 NCC-40 Legal Responsibilities in Buying, Using, and Selling Data Processing Robert P. Bigelow □ □ □ □ NCC-23 Bipolar Microprocessors Ted Laliotis □ □ — D NCC-65 Computing Marsden S. □ Jr. NCC-66 Relational Data Base Technology Dennis W. Fife NCC-43 What Went Wrong With Medical Information Systems: An Optimistic Outlook Jan F. Brandejs □ □ — Issues and Answers Data Security and Personal NCC-89 Systems Norton R. Grecnleld □ NCC-101 KEYNOTE ADDRESS Speaker: Prol. Jay W. Forrester MIT □ NCC-67 Computer Communications. Howard Frank □ NCC-87 Data Bases in the Humanities James Joyce Knowledge-Based Expert and Why? NCC-44 Data Base Machines Michael M. Hammer Privacy James A. Case □ Future Directions in Medical Enhancing Storage Reliability by Sophisticated Coding NCC-46 NCC-64 Interface and Software Standards Japanese and European Viewpoints Sami de Picciotto NCC-41 Schemes Jack Moshman D NCC-22 Graduate and Undergraduate Programs in Computer Science Barry L. Bateman NCC-39 NCC-102 CONFERENCE LUNCHEON Speaker: Neil Gorchow Sperry Univac D NCC-103 SPECIAL ADDRESS Speaker: The Honorable Jimmy Carter Former Governor of Georgia NCC-69 Computer-Aided Manufacturing □ Tony C. Woo NCC-104 INDUSTRY LUNCHEON Speaker: Gov. John E. Sheehan Federal Reserve System Pricing Schedule One cassette: Two cassettes: Three cassettes: Four or more: $5.95 $4.95 each $4.50 each $4.00 each Ordering Information If payment is by cash, check, or credit card, there is no handling charge. add $1.50 for handling. California residents add 6% sales tax. □ Payment is enclosed D Please bill our company Charge to: □ Mastercharge D BankAmericard D Carte Blanche D American Express Credit Cards Only: Account # Expiration date Signature Total for tapes S Handling, if any. S Sales tax, if any. S TOTAL OF ORDER s Name Company. Address City, Zip. Pick up your cassettes at the CSC booth in the South Lobby of the Anaheim Convention Center. CONVENTION SEMINAR CASSETTES 13356 Sherman Way North Hollywood, CA 91605 Phone (213) 765-2777 ! .