In the mid-1960s, RC began the design of a small
integrated circuit-based computer system for industrial control and
automation needs, initially to fill a request by a Danish company to automate a chemical factory they were building in
Poland. The
RC 4000 design emerged in 1966 and was completed for the factory the next year. When combined with appropriate
peripherals, almost always including an RC 2000 along with several rebranded devices from other companies, the RC 4000 was a highly reliable
minicomputer, and went on to be sold across Europe. The
RC 8000 from the mid-1970s used newer-generation
integrated circuits (ICs) to shrink the RC 4000 into a single
rack-mount system. The last in the series, the
RC 9000, further shrunk the machine and improved performance to about 4
MIPS, and was sold in versions that could run either RC 8000 programs, or
Unix. The RC 4000 is famous for its
operating system, developed by
Per Brinch Hansen. Known as the
RC 4000 multiprogramming system, it is the first real-world example of a system using a very simple kernel along with a variety of user-selected programs that built up the system as a whole. Today this concept is known as a
microkernel, and efforts to correct for microkernels' poor performance formed the basis of most OS research through the 1970s and 1980s. Brinch Hansen also worked with
Charles Simonyi and
Peter Kraft on the RC 4000's
Real-time Control System. drive, photographed by Thomas Hillebrandt RC also began selling the
Data General Nova under license in 1970 as the
RC 7000, later introducing their own updated version as the
RC 3600 the next year. This series filled a niche similar to the RC 4000, but for much smaller installations. The RC 3600 became a fixture of many Danish schools and universities. During the 1980s, RC produced the RC700 Piccolo, the RC750 Partner, and the RC759 Piccoline systems, which were sold to Danish schools mostly, and to some businesses in Denmark and abroad. The Piccolo was powered by the
Zilog Z80A CPU, while the Piccoline was powered by the
Intel 80186 processor. In 1988,
International Computers Limited (ICL) acquired a 50% stake in Regnecentralen, then trading as RC Computer, with the intention of merging the business into ICL Denmark. However, the business persisted as a distinct operational entity under the RC International name. ==References==