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Dating to 1972, this brief, silent film promotes the then-new Digivue Panel, which was one of the first functional plasma panel systems. Digivue (seen at 1:00 of the film in an equipment rack) was an innovative, electronic editing and display system developed by Owens Illinois. It was suggested as a replacement for the standard cathode ray tube with an 8.5-inch sandwich filled with gas plasma. A matrix was formed between the glass sheets, consisting of metallic conductors. Used in conjunction with a computer, alphanumeric characters were formed by signals from a keyboard. According to an article about the system, "Copy is punched into the computer and then can be called up on the Digivue panel for revising and editing from the keyboard." According to the film some suggested applications would be for use on calculators, cash registers, telephone and computer terminals, information management systems, medical data systems, inventory scheduling, point of sale devices and more.

>Dating to 1972, this brief, silent film promotes the then-new Digivue Panel, which was one of the first functional plasma panel systems. Digivue (seen at 1:00 of the film in an equipment rack) was an innovative, electronic editing and display system developed by Owens Illinois. It was suggested as a replacement for the standard cathode ray tube with an 8.5-inch sandwich filled with gas plasma. A matrix was formed between the glass sheets, consisting of metallic conductors. Used in conjunction with a computer, alphanumeric characters were formed by signals from a keyboard. According to an article about the system, "Copy is punched into the computer and then can be called up on the Digivue panel for revising and editing from the keyboard." According to the film some suggested applications would be for use on calculators, cash registers, telephone and computer terminals, information management systems, medical data systems, inventory scheduling, point of sale devices and more.
[–] 1 pt

Ah, Agere. The old joke was "What's that noise? Just a company changing Agere without a clutch..." The much vaunted Western Electric semiconductor division vanished with barely a whimper into Agere, which got bought by...someone. Can't remember now.

We had a shop that could have done the work, but I think by the time the Z system showed up, it was well understood that Switching and Network Systems wasn't long for this world.