CYBER word length

Jack Jansen jack at mcvax.uucp
Sun Nov 16 01:14:17 AEST 1986


In article <852 at zeus.UUCP> bobr at zeus.UUCP (Robert Reed) writes:
>In article <612 at astroatc.UUCP> philm at astroatc.UUCP (Phil Mason) writes:
>>The Cyber word length was selected to be 60 bits because of the number of 
>>exact divisors it has : 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, and 30.
>
>That's a great myth.  Almost believable.  But isn't it true that the Cyber
>word length was set a 60 bits to be compatible with the old CDC-6000 series?
>Isn't the operant concern here to be a multiple of 6?
Well, a Cyber isn't really the successor of the CDC-6000 series, as
far as I know, it's the same thing. At some point, they changed the
name CDC-6000 series into CDC Cyber 60 (and then 70, etc.).

60 bits was very convenient, since it was not only 10 6-bit charachters,
but also 4 15-bit instructions.

A long time ago, someone told me the following story to explain
the 60 bit wordlength. Note that I don't really believe it, it's
probably too good to be true.

At some time, the DoD (or some equally powerful body) said they would,
from now on, only buy 64 bit machines, which supported an 8 bit
character set.
Control Data, being fairly sure of the fact that their machine would
be bought *anyway*, because the immense performance gap between it and
it's nearest competitors, decided not only to build a machine with
6 bit characters, but also use 60 bit words, so that it would be
virtually impossible to transfer tapes containing any binary data
from their machine to anything else......
-- 
	Jack Jansen, jack at mcvax.UUCP
	The shell is my oyster.



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