The standard
operating system for the 7/32 and 8/32 was Interdata's
OS/32. At MIT, by 1976, Interdata computers were being used by the
Architecture Machine Group and Joint Computer Facility at MIT, using the
FORTRAN and
PL/I programming languages.
Unix was ported to the platform in 1977 by two groups, working independently; to the 7/32 at
Wollongong University, and to the 8/32 at
Bell Labs, making the 32-bit Interdata machines the first non-PDP computers to run Unix (See
V6 Unix § portability). Bell chose the 8/32 for its port because the Interdata computer was as different from the DEC
PDP-11 as possible. Perkin-Elmer distributed the Wollongong Unix port as Perkin-Elmer Edition 7, the first version of Unix supported by a computer company. By 1979, researchers at the Architecture Machine Group created an operating system modelled on
Multics called
Magic 6, which featured the Multics concepts of pages, segments and dynamic linking, but had no security checks. ==Emulation==