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DEC /dek/ n.
 1. v. Verbal (and only rarely
   written) shorthand for decrement, i.e. `decrease by one'. 
   Especially used by assembly programmers, as many assembly languages
   have a dec mnemonic.  Antonym: inc.  2. n. Commonly
   used abbreviation for Digital Equipment Corporation, later
   deprecated by DEC itself in favor of "Digital" and now entirely
   obsolete following the buyout by Compaq.  Before the killer micro revolution of the late 1980s, hackerdom was closely
   symbiotic with DEC's pioneering timesharing machines.  The first of
   the group of cultures described by this lexicon nucleated around
   the PDP-1 (see TMRC).  Subsequently, the PDP-6, PDP-10,
   PDP-20, PDP-11 and VAX were all foci of large and
   important hackerdoms, and DEC machines long dominated the ARPANET
   and Internet machine population.  DEC was the technological leader
   of the minicomputer era (roughly 1967 to 1987), but its failure to
   embrace microcomputers and Unix early cost it heavily in profits
   and prestige after silicon got cheap.  Nevertheless, the
   microprocessor design tradition owes a major debt to the PDP-11
   instruction set, and every one of the major general-purpose
   microcomputer OSs so far (CP/M, MS-DOS, Unix, OS/2, Windows NT) was
   either genetically descended from a DEC OS, or incubated on DEC
   hardware, or both.  Accordingly, DEC was for many years still
   regarded with a certain wry affection even among many hackers too
   young to have grown up on DEC machines.
DEC reclaimed some of its old reputation among techies in the first half of the 1990s. The success of the Alpha, an innovatively-designed and very high-performance killer micro, helped a lot. So did DEC's newfound receptiveness to Unix and open systems in general. When Compaq acquired DEC at the end of 1998 there was some concern that these gains would be lost along with the DEC nameplate, but the merged company has so far turned out to be culturally dominated by the ex-DEC side.
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