Lars; I’m not sure of the specific IMP numbering assignments. Is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARPANET#/media/File:Arpanet_map_1973.jpg too late for your purposes? I have a fond spot for CARNEGIE there, although I didn’t reach CMU until Fall 1981 and VAX’en were ascendant by that point … I did manage to get time on a PDP-10 for a while. I’ve been looking forward to the PiDP-10 as a “way back” means to revisit that period of my youth. Would be pleased to host the CARNEGIE IMP, if that works for you/others. Not that I have much of a clue what would be involved, yet ;->.
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I think Lars is correct about just TOPS-10 being on the ARPANET.
Though CMU had DEC-20s running TOPS-20, AFAIK they weren't on the
ARPANET by the time I graduated in 81. I have a vague feeling
that some of the PDP-11s that the CS department owned had some
flavor of ability to connect the ARPANET, but that's definitely
not certain. I do know that we were able to telnet and NFT files
from MIT-XX and MAXC back in the day; as well as telnet the other
MIT- machines (AI, etc) via the ARPANET in say 1978/79.
Steve
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I think Lars is correct about just TOPS-10 being on the ARPANET. Though CMU had DEC-20s running TOPS-20, AFAIK they weren't on the ARPANET by the time I graduated in 81. I have a vague feeling that some of the PDP-11s that the CS department owned had some flavor of ability to connect the ARPANET, but that's definitely not certain.
Hi Lars - please sign me up as an ARPANET host!
I do just happen to have two Pis running TOPS10 right now - are these of any use?
On Jan 22, 2026, at 10:17 PM, Lars Brinkhoff <lars.br...@gmail.com> wrote:
Oscar picked up the project and made this:
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On Jan 23, 2026, at 1:17 AM, Lars Brinkhoff <lars.br...@gmail.com> wrote:
Oscar picked up the project and made this:
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MIT had a fourth ITS PDP-10, “MIT-MC”, when “Macsyma” split of MIT-ML and was hosted on a dedicated PDP-10.
I was in High School in the mid 70’s, and used to “hang out” at 545 Tech Square, 9th floor, which had 4 PDP-10’s, and the infamous “Star Wars” PDP-1.
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Hey Lars - whats the status of collecting IBM ... any ideas?
The "UT" in the original four ARPANET nodes refers to the University of Utah (Node 4), which was installed in December 1969. The other three originals were UCLA, SRI (Stanford Research Institute), and UC Santa Barbara.
2. Absence in Early Maps (1969–1974)1969–1973: UT Austin does not appear on ARPANET logical maps from this period.
January 1974: A management study report from January 1974 explicitly noted that major commercial and research centers in "Texas are not" yet represented on the network, confirming that UT Austin was not yet connected at this time.
Appearance on Maps: The University of Texas (often labeled "Texas" or "UTEXAS" on logical maps) begins appearing on ARPANET maps between 1975 and 1977.
Visual Confirmation: By the March 1977 logical map, "Texas" is clearly visible as a node, connected to the network alongside other expanding universities.
Directory Evidence: The ARPANET Directory from 1978 lists the University of Texas at Austin (specifically the Linguistics Research Center and Computation Center) as a fully operational host.
Hi Lars, we'd like to volunteer to adopt the utexas node as part DecwarOrg - suspect utexas was a bit after 1973 though, maybe around 1975 or so as a guess?