Advanced Remote Display Station

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Advanced Remote Display Station
Advanced Remote Display Station Console.png
ARDS desktop terminal with mouse.
Developer MIT's E.S.L. and Project MAC
ManufacturerComputer Displays, Inc.
Typedesktop vector graphics and text display terminal
Release date1968; 56 years ago
Introductory price$12,750 (equivalent to about $114,675 in 2024)
Display Tektronix Type 611 storage tube [1]
Input keyboard, mouse, joystick, graphics tablet

The Advanced Remote Display Station (also referred to as the ARDS) was a desktop storage-tube-based vector graphics and text terminal produced by Computer Displays, Inc. starting in 1968. It was announced at the 1968 Spring Joint Computer Conference and available by August 1968 for $12,750 (about $114,675 in 2024). [2]

Contents

The ARDS was the first commercial product to include a computer mouse as an optional peripheral as early as April 1968 for an additional $1200 (about $10,793 in 2024). [1] [2]

The ARDS was capable of connecting to a computer remotely through a modem, or locally through an RS-232 cable. Computer Displays, Inc. also offered optional graphical input peripherals for the ARDS including a mouse and joystick.

Development

The ARDS began development in early 1965 jointly by MIT's Electronic Systems Laboratory and Project MAC at MIT's CSAIL, with prototypes named the ARDS-I and ARDS-II prior to becoming a commercial product. [3] [4] The first ARDS-I prototype was completed in 1965; an early ARDS-II prototype was functional by May 1967, and was updated in August 1967 with the larger, final display CRT. [4]

Hardware

Display

The display of the commercially produced ARDS was a Tektronix Type 611 direct-view storage tube, meaning that once graphics or text were drawn onto the screen, they could not be erased individually without erasing the entire screen. [1] [5] This was attributed to the terminal's relatively low cost and intended remote use over narrow-bandwidth telephone lines. Filling the entire display with 4000 alphanumeric characters took about 33 seconds. [5]

Mouse

The ARDS's mouse did not use a rolling ball to track movement, but rather two perpendicularly mounted wheels on the bottom and three buttons on top, much like the mouse used during The Mother of All Demos. [6]

Other models

The ARDS 100A was released as the successor to the ARDS in 1969. [7] It was priced at under $8000, much lower than the original ARDS. Along with the original ARDS's mouse and joystick, it added a graphics tablet as an input option. [8]

Computer Displays, Inc. was acquired by Adage, another graphics terminal manufacturer, in 1970. [9] By 1971, another ARDS model was being sold under Adage as the ARDS 100B. [10] [7]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 Computer Design V07 N04 (PDF). April 1968. pp. 80–86.
  2. 1 2 Datamation (PDF). August 1968. p. 13.
  3. Smith, Lyle B. (1970-12-01). "A Survey of Interactive Graphical Systems for Mathematics". ACM Comput. Surv. 2 (4): 261–301. doi:10.1145/356580.356582. ISSN   0360-0300.
  4. 1 2 Ross, D. T. (Douglas Taylor); Ward, John Erwin; Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Electronic Systems (May 1968). "Investigations in computer-aided design for numerically controlled production". MIT LIDS Technical Reports: 100–113.
  5. 1 2 Fiasconaro, James Gerard (June 1970). "A Computer-controlled Graphical Display Processor". MIT LCS Technical Reports: 6–9.
  6. Advanced Remote Display Station Reference Manual (PDF). Computer Displays, Inc. December 1, 1968. pp. 29–31.
  7. 1 2 "epocalc - Computer models database". www.epocalc.net. Retrieved 2024-10-26.
  8. Datamation (PDF). December 1969. p. 17.
  9. Datamation (PDF). November 1, 1970. p. 98.
  10. Modern Data (PDF). June 1971. p. 47.