Through the early 1960s GE worked with
Dartmouth College on the development of a
time-sharing operating system, which would later go on to become the
Dartmouth Time-Sharing System (DTSS). The system was constructed by attaching a number of
teletypewriters to a smaller GE machine called the
DATANET-30 (DN-30), which was a small computer that had evolved from an earlier process-control machine. DTSS actually ran on the DN-30. The DN-30 accepted commands one at a time from the terminals connected to it, and then ran their requested programs on the GE-235. The GE-235 had no idea it was not running in
batch mode, and the illusion of
multitasking was being maintained externally. In 1965 GE started packaging the DN-30 and GE-235 systems together as the
GE-265. The GE-265 achieved fame not only for being the first commercially successful time-sharing system, but it was also the machine on which the
BASIC programming language was created. ==See also==