[ih] bytes [Re: "network unix"]
Noel Chiappa
jnc at mercury.lcs.mit.edu
Sun Oct 9 14:20:47 PDT 2016
> From: Brian E Carpenter
> I think the question was really settled in April 1964 when the IBM 360
> was announced.
I too was going to mention the 360. I'm not sure we can elucidate _precisely_
what led to the focus on 8-bit bytes, so questions like 'would the 360 _on
its own_ have done it' may be forever unknowable. But I do think the 360 was
one of the biggest factors.
The other one I'd point to is ASCII. Technically, one only needs 7 bits for
ASCII, but 7 is odd (although there's no particular reason one couldn't have
odd-length bytes, but it just feels, well, odd), and so I think ASCII was a
big driver to 8-bit bytes; it certainly knocked out 6-bit bytes.
And probably the power-of-two was an influence, too.
> I think the byte stabilised at 8 bits in my mind because of the PDP-11,
> rapidly followed by the Intel 8080 and Motorola 6800.
The PDP-11 was certainly a factor (I think at one point, before micros
appeared, it was the best-selling computer, in terms of numbers, in history).
I'm not so sure about the micros - I think they may have 'put the last nail
in', but I think they were more of a recognition of reality, than a pusher
thereof.
> From: Jack Haverty <jack at 3kitty.org>
> Wow, people are actually reading this stuff...
Hey, you're putting the energy in to write it, the least we can do is read! :-)
Noel
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