[ih] words and bytes [Re: "network unix"]
John Day
jeanjour at comcast.net
Mon Oct 10 23:55:02 PDT 2016
Yea, I have always wondered about that. The minicomputer companies had “done it” to IBM you would have thought they would be looking over their shoulders. But I guess corporate culture was just too strong and they couldn’t shift to a consumer model.
> On Oct 10, 2016, at 16:45, John R. Levine <johnl at iecc.com> wrote:
>
>>> There was a competing 16 bit word addressed design by the designer of
>>> the PDP-8, which after DEC rejected it became the DG Nova.
>>
>> I hear this repeated a lot, but I'm not sure it's accurate. That competing
>> design has surfaced (Google "PDP-X"), and it's not very much like the Nova.
>
> Huh, I'd missed that. You're right, it was more like a stripped down
> PDP-10 than the Nova. But it's definitely true that Ed DeCastro who
> designed the PDP-8 and I believe the PDP-X left to form Data General.
>
> Now I'm thinking about the eventual fate of DEC and DG, both clobbered by
> PCs. DEC came out with single chip package PDP-8 and J-11, and DG with
> single chip Micronova, but they were both too little too late.
>
> I guess the PDP-11 was more influential, since the x86 series uses the
> 11's (at the time) unsual little-endian byte addressing.
>
> Regards,
> John Levine, johnl at iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies",
> Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. https://jl.ly
> _______
> internet-history mailing list
> internet-history at postel.org
> http://mailman.postel.org/mailman/listinfo/internet-history
> Contact list-owner at postel.org for assistance.
More information about the Internet-history
mailing list