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{{Short description|16 bit minicomputer line (1974–1988)}}
[[Image:Dg-eclipse.jpg|thumb|288px|right|Data General Eclipse S/130 front panel]]▼
{{Refimprove|date=January 2017}}
The '''Data General Eclipse''' line of computers by [[Data General]] were [[16-bit]] [[minicomputer]]s released in early [[1974]] and sold until 1988. The Eclipse was based on many of the same concepts as the [[Data General Nova]], but included support for [[virtual memory]] and [[multitasking]] more suitable to the small office than the lab. It was also packaged differently for this reason, in a floor-standing case the size of a small fridge.▼
{{Infobox computing device
| name = Eclipse
| codename =
| aka =
| logo = Data General logo.svg
| image = Dg-eclipse.jpg
| caption = Data General Eclipse S/130 front panel
| developer =
| manufacturer = Data General
| family = Nova
| type =
| generation =
| release date =
| retail availability =
| lifespan =
| price =
| discontinued =
| units sold =
| units shipped =
| media =
| os = [[Data General AOS|AOS]]
| power =
| soc =
| cpu =
| memory =
| storage =
| memory card =
| display =
| graphics =
| sound =
| input =
| controllers =
| camera =
| touchpad =
| connectivity =
| currentfw =
| platform =
| service =
| dimensions =
| weight =
| topgame =
| compatibility=
| predecessor =
| successor =
| related =
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| website =
| language =
}}
▲[[Image:
Production problems with the Eclipse led to a rash of lawsuits in the late [[1970s]], after new versions of the machine were pre-ordered by many DG customers, and then never arrived. After over a year of waiting many decided to sue the company, while others simply cancelled their orders and went elsewhere. It appeared that the Eclipse was originally intended to replace the Nova outright, also evidenced by the fact that the Nova 3 series released at the same time was phased out the next year. However, strong continuing demand resulted in the Nova 4, perhaps as a result of the continuing problems with the Eclipse.▼
▲The '''Data General Eclipse''' line of
==Description==
The [[Data General Nova]] was intended to outperform the [[PDP-8]] while being less expensive, and in a similar fashion, the Eclipse was meant to compete against the larger [[PDP-11]] computers. It kept the simple register architecture of the Nova but added a [[stack pointer]] which the Nova lacked. The stack pointer was added back to the later Nova 3 machines in 1975 and also used on the later 32-bit [[Data General Eclipse MV/8000]]. The [[Data General AOS|AOS]] [[operating system]] was quite sophisticated, advanced compared to the PDP-11 offerings, with [[access control list]]s (ACLs) for file protection.
▲Production problems with the Eclipse led to a rash of lawsuits in the late
== Facts ==
The original [[Cray-1]] system used an Eclipse to act as a Maintenance and Control Unit (MCU). It was configured with two [[Ampex]] CRTs, an 80 MB Ampex disk drive, a thermal printer, and a 9-track tape drive. Its primary purpose was to download an image of either the [[Cray Operating System]] or customer engineering diagnostics at boot time. Once booted, it acted as a status and control console via RDOS ''station software''.
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{Data General}}
[[Category:Minicomputers]]
[[Category:Data General computers|Eclipse]]
[[Category:16-bit computers]]
{{mini-compu-stub}}
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