- Keydata Corporation
Keydata Corporation was one of the first companies in the
time-sharing business in the 1960s. It was the brainchild ofCharles W. Adams , anentrepreneur who had founded "Adams Associates" who are best remembered as the authors of computer equipment surveys during this period.Keydata was located in
Technology Square inCambridge, Massachusetts , where project MAC, the seminal venture sponsored byMIT which saw the developmemt ofMULTICS one of the earliest time sharing software systems.UNIX is a derivative of MULTICS. In addition, IBM's Scientific Development center was located in Technology Square and this R&D center developed the first IBMvirtual memory system computer. This was initially installed on a modifiedIBM 360/40 computer with the informal name of the "Cambridge box." LaterIBM used modernized technology for the 360/67 and, today, all modern computers use "virtual memory."The coincident location of the nexus of time sharing and virtual memory developers in Cambridge resulted in a heady climate of information technology state-of-the-art knowledge sharing which Keydata profited by, although its
UNIVAC computer architecture permitted only software-based implementations. At the time, the fashion was the idea that computer power would be made available on a network connection of a "dumb" terminal to a "smart"mainframe computer utility, sharing mammothcomputer power with thousands, if not millions, of users.Keydata used a
UNIVAC 490 computer to provide commercial applications such as inventory management and accounting applications on a network basis to slow Teletype-based terminals in customer locations and replaced in-house computers and other services with its highly customized parameter-driven distribution and manufacturing applications.Other seminal services were initially implemented on this service, such as
Instinet , a stock trading service now owned by Reuters which trades large block transactions on US securities markets, and a very early network inventory network application forShell Oil company.At its peak, Keydata had hundreds of customers on-line but was never able to compete with emerging micro-computer applications which took over the market, at first, with copies of Keydata developed applications.
This summary was provided by Arthur Lemay, former Technical Director of Keydata (1966-1969), from personal recollection. http://lemay.ws
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