That's right. There was also the Fairchild PPS 25 system (my data book is from 1972, so it must have been marketed just about same time as the 4004 chipset) and the early bit-slice (or nibble-slice) systems used to produce something that could be called PLC:s. But they were all programmed in native assembler and they were not at all like PLC:s of today.
An attempt to standardise hardware and software was done by the Pro-Log Corporation of Monterey, CA. The name was derived from Programmable Logic Control and that was the first time I saw that combination of words.
They had a three-card system, the PLS-403, which I used to control measuring devices in robot cells. The measurements were handled by a Tektronix calculator with a very expensive I/O board. Slow, slow. But we were happy.
There was also a system based on a hardwired finite state machine with instructions in a set of 1702A 256 Byte EPROMS. That could have been called a PLC, even if there was no processor.
My old collection of catalogs from that time includes an intel 4004 manual from February 1973 and a catalogue from same time. One of the application examples shows a bottling machine controlled by a 4004 system. A PLC.
Gunnar Englund
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