From: nolegz@juno.com (Lloyd E Briggs)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 12a11ba850ab10d4a83f5444c0c0246dbeba7f5986a0941453852313de2efbba
Message ID: <19970404.154747.11926.0.NOLEGZ@juno.com>
Reply To: <um2L5D45w165w@bwalk.dm.com>
UTC Datetime: 1997-04-04 21:19:45 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 13:19:45 -0800 (PST)
From: nolegz@juno.com (Lloyd E Briggs)
Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 13:19:45 -0800 (PST)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Book Recommendation: "Supermen" (about Cray, Norris, CDC, etc.)
In-Reply-To: <um2L5D45w165w@bwalk.dm.com>
Message-ID: <19970404.154747.11926.0.NOLEGZ@juno.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
I would like to be removed from this mailing list please
On Thu, 03 Apr 97 19:24:05 EST dlv@bwalk.dm.com (Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM)
writes:
>"Timothy C. May" <tcmay@got.net> writes:
>> Next came the vaunted 6600, after almost not being funded to
>completion. It
>> waws the first true supercomputer. Cray had moved his team up to
>Chippewa
> ^^^^???
>
>I used to play with a 6600. It had some interesting hardware features:
>* It used one's complement rather than two's complement to represent
>negative
>integers. (I.e. -x is the same as not x; a pattern of all 1's is
>'-0'.)
>* It had 60-bit words for both integers and single-precision reals.
>A 120-bit double precision was pretty slow. A word could fit 10 6-bit
>characters, but any kind of text processing was a bitch.
>* 15-bit addresses referred to the whole word. A word could contain
>several instructions, but only an instruction on a word boundary
>could be a target of a branch.
>
>---
>
>Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM
>Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013,
>14.4Kbps
>
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