Monday, May 4, 2026

VAX 11/780

 from copilot:

The VAX‑11/780 is one of the most important minicomputers in computing history. Introduced by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in 1977, it effectively defined what people meant by “VAX” and helped shape modern computer architecture.

Here’s a clear overview, from context to technical details and impact.


What “VAX‑11/780” Means

  • VAX = Virtual Address eXtension
  • 11 = marketing continuity with DEC’s earlier PDP‑11 line
  • 780 = roughly “0.78 MIPS” (a performance rating by DEC’s internal metric)

Despite the name, it was not a PDP‑11; it was a completely new 32‑bit architecture.


Why It Mattered

The VAX‑11/780 was revolutionary because it combined:

  • True 32‑bit computing
  • Virtual memory built into the architecture
  • A rich, expressive instruction set designed to support high‑level languages

For universities, research labs, and businesses, it became the machine of the late 1970s and 1980s.


Architecture Highlights

Word Size & Memory

  • 32‑bit architecture
  • Virtual address space: up to 4 GB (huge for the time)
  • Demand‑paged virtual memory with hardware support

Instruction Set (CISC)

  • Classic CISC design:
    • Hundreds of instructions
    • Variable‑length instructions
    • Memory‑to‑memory operations
  • Designed to make compiled code compact and expressive
  • Excellent support for:
    • Procedure calls
    • Stack frames
    • Data structures

This made VAX machines very friendly to languages like C, FORTRAN, Pascal, and later Ada.


Performance

  • Roughly 1 MIPS (million instructions per second)
  • Slower in raw speed than later RISC machines, but very powerful for its era
  • Performance was respectable because much work could be done in fewer instructions


Operating Systems

The VAX‑11/780 ran several influential operating systems:

  • VMS (later OpenVMS) – DEC’s flagship OS
    • Highly reliable
    • Strong security model
    • Still in use today (on modern hardware)
  • BSD UNIX
    • The VAX became the platform for early BSD development
    • Many UNIX features (job control, TCP/IP stack refinements) matured on VAX systems

If you’ve used modern UNIX or Linux, you’re indirectly benefiting from VAX‑era work.


Hardware Form

  • Typically filled one or more refrigerator‑sized cabinets
  • Used TTL logic (no microprocessor yet)
  • Consumed significant power and required cooling
  • Peripheral ecosystem included:
    • Disk drives (RP06, RM03, etc.)
    • Tape drives
    • Serial terminals (VT100 was iconic)


Historical Impact

The VAX‑11/780:

  • Dominated academic computing in the late ’70s and ’80s
  • Became the reference machine for operating‑system research
  • Influenced later CPU and OS design—even as RISC later rejected many CISC ideas
  • Marked the high point of minicomputers before workstations and PCs took over

A famous saying from the era:


“If you haven’t used a VAX, you don’t know what a real computer is.”



Decline

  • In the late 1980s–1990s, RISC processors (SPARC, MIPS, PA‑RISC) surpassed VAX in performance per watt
  • DEC eventually replaced VAX with Alpha
  • Still, VAX systems lingered in production for decades due to VMS reliability


If you’d like, I can:

  • Compare the VAX‑11/780 to the PDP‑11 or early RISC machines
  • Explain why VAX CISC lost to RISC despite its elegance
  • Talk about VMS vs UNIX on VAX
  • Or connect VAX ideas to modern CPUs and operating systems

What angle are you most interested in?


Saturday, May 2, 2026

Ideas for posts on Threads

 From copilot;

Here are five high‑engagement Threads post ideas that work well across niches, with ready‑to‑use examples you can adapt:

  1. Finish-the-thought prompts
    These invite quick, low‑effort replies.
    “One thing people
    underestimate about success is ______.”

  2. Hot take (without being hostile)
    Slightly contrarian opinions spark conversation.
    “Hot take: Consistency matters more than talent. Agree or disagree?”

  3. A/B choice questions
    People love picking sides—and commenting shorter answers.
    “Which are you more productive with: 
  4. A) Early mornings 
  5. B) Late nights”

  6. Personal lesson + open question
    Vulnerability builds trust and replies.
    “Something I learned the hard way: You don’t need permission to start. 
  7. What’s a lesson life taught you late?”

  8. Relatable micro‑moment
    Familiar experiences get replies and shares.
    “That moment when you reread a message 5 times before hitting send 😅 
  9. Tell me I’m not alone.”

Bonus tip:
End posts with
one clear question and keep them under 2–4 short lines—Threads boosts content that gets replies fast.

If you want, tell me your niche or goal (teaching, writing, business, humor, etc.), and I’ll tailor five high‑performing posts specifically for you.


Friday, May 1, 2026

Tidally locked planet orbiting a black hole

 From copilot:

Short answer: yes—but the difference is usually tiny unless the planet is extremely close to the black hole.

Let’s unpack why.


1. Gravitational time dilation depends on distance

In general relativity, gravitational time dilation means that clocks run more slowly deeper in a gravitational well. For a (non‑rotating) black hole, the time-dilation factor depends on radius \(r\):

\[
\Delta t_{\infty} = \frac{\Delta t_{local}}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{2GM}{rc^2}}}
\]

Closer to the black hole → stronger relativistic effects.


2. A tidally locked planet is stretched across a gravitational gradient

A tidally locked planet orbiting a black hole has:

  • Near side: slightly closer to the black hole
  • Far side: slightly farther away

Because relativistic effects depend on distance, this means:

The near side experiences slightly stronger relativistic effects
The far side experiences slightly weaker relativistic effects

This includes:

  • Gravitational time dilation
  • Gravitational redshift
  • Spacetime curvature

So yes, the far side really does age infinitesimally faster than the near side.


3. How big is the difference?

For most realistic scenarios: absurdly small.

Example (conceptual):

  • Planet radius comparable to Earth
  • Orbiting a stellar-mass or supermassive black hole
  • Stable orbit well outside the event horizon

The fractional difference in time dilation across the planet is roughly:

\[
\Delta \left(\frac{\Delta t}{t}\right) \sim \frac{GM}{c^2} \cdot \frac{R_{planet}}{r^2}
\]

Even very close to a supermassive black hole, this difference is typically far smaller than what atomic clocks on Earth can detect—unless the planet is perilously close to the event horizon.


4. Extreme cases near the event horizon

If the planet were so close that this difference became noticeable:

  • Tidal forces would likely tear the planet apart (spaghettification)
  • Structural stresses would exceed planetary material strength
  • Stable solid planets probably couldn’t exist there

Ironically, this means:


If the relativistic difference across the planet is large, the planet probably can’t survive.



5. What about rotation and frame dragging?

If the black hole is rotating (a Kerr black hole):

  • Frame dragging slightly modifies spacetime
  • The near side still experiences stronger effects
  • The asymmetry is direction-dependent but does not reverse the conclusion

The near side always sits deeper in the gravitational well.


6. Summary

  • ✅ A tidally locked planet orbiting a black hole does experience different relativistic effects across its surface
  • ✅ The near side experiences stronger time dilation
  • ✅ The far side experiences slightly weaker relativistic effects
  • ⚠️ The difference is negligible unless the orbit is extremely close
  • ❌ If the difference is large enough to matter, the planet likely cannot remain intact


If you’d like, I can:

  • Estimate the effect for a specific black hole mass and orbital radius
  • Compare this to time dilation across Earth
  • Extend this to neutron stars or rotating black holes
  • Explore what an observer on the planet would actually see

Just tell me.