On Sep 25, 2018, at 9:21 AM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
On 09/25/2018 08:45 AM, Christian Corti via cctalk wrote:
On Mon, 24 Sep 2018, Chuck Guzis wrote:
How about some 22-bit or 13 bit architectures?
How about our Dietz MINCAL 523? 19 bit architecture, memory is 20 bits
with parity. Microprogrammed machine, microcode within normal address
space, mixed twos-complement and sign-magnitude arithmetic. Completely
reverse-engineered due to lack of information :-))
8K core memory, microcode and boot loader stored in foil ROMs (similar
to wire rope ROMs).
I was wondering if anyone would rise to the challenge. In fact, some
Harvard-architecture MCUs have unusual *instruction* word lengths.
I think the PB250 was 22/44 bits and, of course, there was a whole horde
of 36-bit mainframes, some extending well into the 1980s, as well as
other systems with multiples of 6 bit lengths.
How many of today's ISAs are *not* byte-addressable nor implement a
stack? I'm somewhat curious as to how HLLs have influenced our thought
regarding architecture.
--Chuck
I?m trying to remember if the Harris Minicomputers were 22-bit or 24-bit, I think they
were 24-bit.
Zane