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Distributed data processing

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Distributed Data Processing (DDP) was the term that IBM used for the IBM 8100 (1975) and its successor, the IBM 3790 (1979). Datamation described the 3790 in March 1979 as "less than successful."[1] [2]

DDP was used by IBM to refer to two envrionments:

Each pair included a Telecommunications Monitor and a Database system.[3] The layoring involved a message, containing information to form a transaction, which was then processed by an application program.[4]

Lower case DDP

Hadoop, etc. - coming.

  1. ^ Woods, Larry (March 1979). "IBM's 8100: First Impressions". Datamation.
  2. ^ "(which can simulate 3790 functions through the DPCX operating system)"
  3. ^ a b {{cite magazine |magazine=Computerworld |author=Ronald G. Ross |title=IBM's Distributed Processing Capabilities For Large-Scale Data Base Systems, Part 1
  4. ^ a b {{cite magazine |magazine=Computerworld |author=Ronald G. Ross |title=IBM's Distributed Processing Capabilities For Large-Scale Data Base Systems, Part 2