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Flashback to DEC VT-100s in the CMU graduate student terminal room.
The DEC stuff feels like a foreign country to me.

Most of the world is powered by Unix (and its clones/derivatives), at least in the infrastructure space, with a small percent still running Windows Server for some masochistic reason. Outside of playing with OpenVMS exactly one time with qemu (purely because I kind of liked their goofy shark logo [1]), I've never used anything from DEC, but throughout the 80s my understanding is that DEC was a force to be reckoned with. I think there was probably more diversity in operating systems back then.

The DEC stuff was huge for a period of time, and I feel like there's an alternate universe where VMS and VAX stayed the standard, and Unix is the footnote. I'm not sure that universe would be better, there's probably a reason that Unix won overall, but it's not like DEC and VAX were tiny things.

[1] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/72/Dec-vms-...

> Most of the world is powered by Unix

Well, Unix came into being on a DEC PDP-11, and C is basically high-level PDP-11 assembly...

And MS-DOS was influenced by CP/M which was influenced by DEC operating systems (like OS/8 for the PDP-8).

DEC/digital always made probably the most attractive computers beyond Apple (and I realize that both parts of that are subjective).

Their cases were far more white than beige, and generally fairly understated and subtle. (Although sometimes that backfired, because it was hard finding white peripherals - https://antnik.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/dec_... )

I owned the Digital Celebris in both a desktop and a mini tower configuration.