thumb|right|250px|The model identification "medallion" of a DECstation 5000 Model 120 thumb|right|250px|DECstation 5000 Model 200 with top cover removed
thumb|right|250px|The model identification "medallion" of a DECstation 5000 Model 120 thumb|right|250px|DECstation 5000 Model 200 with top cover removed
The DECstation was a brand of computers used by DEC, and refers to three distinct lines of computer systems—the first released in 1978 as a word processing system, and the latter (more widely known) two both released in 1989. These comprised a range of computer workstations based on the MIPS architecture and a range of PC compatibles. The MIPS-based workstations ran ULTRIX, a DEC-proprietary version of UNIX, and early releases of OSF/1.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).