Advanced Remote Display Station
![]() ARDS desktop terminal with mouse. | |
Developer | MIT's E.S.L. and Project MAC |
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Manufacturer | Computer Displays, Inc. |
Type | desktop vector graphics and text display terminal |
Release date | 1968; 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 or ARDS 100A[2]) 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).[3] By December 1969, the price of the ARDS had dropped to under $8000.[2]
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][3]
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, joystick, and graphics tablet.[2]
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.[4][5] 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.[5]
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][6] 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.[6]
Mouse
The ARDS' 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.[7]
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Top view of the ARDS' mouse.
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Bottom view of the ARDS' mouse.
References
- ^ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Computer Design V07 N04 (PDF). April 1968. pp. 80–86.
- ^ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Datamation (PDF). December 1969. p. 17.
- ^ 3.0 3.1 Datamation (PDF). August 1968. p. 13.
- ^ 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.
- ^ 5.0 5.1 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.
- ^ 6.0 6.1 Fiasconaro, James Gerard (June 1970). "A Computer-controlled Graphical Display Processor". MIT LCS Technical Reports: 6–9.
- ^ Advanced Remote Display Station Reference Manual (PDF). Computer Displays, Inc. December 1, 1968. pp. 29–31.
External links
- The ARDS Reference Manual of December 1, 1968
- An MIT paper describing a graphical circuit drawing and editing program for the ARDS from October 1969 (source code listed on pp. 62–94)