TUTSIM (Twente University of Technology SIMulator) was developed at the Control Laboratory of the
University of Twente in the early-1970s. The program was initially created for the
PDP-11 and
LSI-11 series of
DEC. At the end of the 1970s it was ported to run on microprocessors like the
MOS Technology 6502 of the
Apple II and the
Intel 8086 of the
IBM Personal Computer. The company Meerman Automation took over the development of the package in the early-1980s. The rise of the IBM PC gave TUTSIM its world fame, making scientific simulation software available for researchers all over the world. Failing to meet the demands of a graphical user interface with the rise of
Microsoft Windows in the late-1980s the popularity of TUTSIM slowly faded away. Multiple requests from bond graph researchers caused the University of Twente to begin development of a successor to TUTSIM. This resulted in the software
20-sim, released by
Controllab, which contained many of the features that made TUTSIM popular. == Use ==