Corbató, F. J.2011-06-092011-06-091990-11-14Fernando J. Corbató, OH 162. Oral history interview by Arthur L. Norberg, 14 November 1990, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. http://purl.umn.edu/107230OH 162https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107230Transcript, 97 pp. Audio file available at http://purl.umn.edu/95580Corbató discusses computer science research, especially time-sharing, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Topics in the first session include: Phil Morse and the establishment of the Computation Center, Corbató's management of the Computation Center, the development of the WHIRLWIND computer, John McCarthy and research on time-sharing, cooperation between International Business Machines (IBM) and MIT, and J. C. R. Licklider and the development of Project MAC. Topics in the second session include: time-sharing, the development of MULTICS by the General Electric (GE) Computer Division, IBM's reaction to MIT working with GE, the development of CTSS, the development of UNIX in cooperation with Bell Labs, interaction with the Information Processing Techniques Office of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, interaction with Honeywell after they purchased GE's Computer Division, and the transformation of Project MAC into the Laboratory for Computer Science.en-USComputer historyUNIX (Computer file)United States. -- Advanced Research Projects Agency. -- Information Processing Techniques OfficeTime-sharing computer systems -- Research.Project MAC (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)Operating systems (Computers) -- ResearchMULTICSMorse, Philip McCord, 1903-McCarthy, John, 1927-Massachusetts Institute of Technology. -- Laboratory for Computer ScienceMassachusetts Institute of Technology. -- Computation CenterLicklider, J. C. R.International Business Machines Corporation.Honeywell, Inc.General Electric Company. -- Computer Dept.CTSS (Computer operating system)Computer industryAT & T Bell LaboratoriesWhirlwind computerGeneral Electric CompanyOral history interview with Fernando J. CorbatóOral history interview with Fernando J. CorbatoOral History