# Happy Birthday VAX! From Yahoo! news, the [VMS operating system just turned 30 years old][1]. Amazing that there are so many VAXen still in use today: > Gareth Williams, associate director of the Smithsonian > Astrophysical Observatory Minor Planet Center since 1990, has been > tracking the 400,000 orbits of known asteroids and comets in the > solar system using a cluster of 12 VAXes, from offices on the > Harvard University campus. The Deutsche Börse stock exchange in > Frankfurt runs on VMS. The Australian Stock Exchange runs on > it. The train system in Ireland, Irish Rail, runs on it, as does > the Amsterdam police department. The U.S. Postal Service runs its > mail sorters on OpenVMS, and Amazon.com uses it to ship 112,000 > packages a day. It has "a very loyal installed base of customers," > says Ann McQuaid, general manager of OpenVMS at HP, who shows no > signs of wanting to give it up. I haven't sat in front of a VAX terminal in years; the last time was in the late eighties when I was a CS student. It was a [VAX 11-780][2], which I did C programming on. I still recall the VAX lab being reserved for junior and senior-year students only, as it was light-years ahead of the horrific [Cyber mainframe][3] freshman CS and Engineering students were subjected to. [1]: https://web.archive.org/web/20071107063822/http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/202801794 [2]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Vax11-780.jpg [3]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CDC_Cyber