Oops, I lied... Each 4-bit word represented a decimal digit between 0 and NINE 
(1001), not 10. Jeez, I feel like a dufus!



If we cannot afford to take care of Veterans, then we should stop making them.
David C. Wilker Jr.
USAF (RET)

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: David Wilker 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, December 03, 2009 9:33 PM
  Subject: Re: kibimebigibi and Original Mac/UBUNTU


  >The IBM 1620 used decimal arithmetic with 4 bit bytes limited to digits 0-9
  >and plus and minus signs and what was effectively a space marking the end of 
a
  >number. It was called BCD coding.

  I used to teach Binary Coded Decimal to my students. It was basically
  a shortcut, half Binary and half Decimal. You had four-bit words, but
  they were only 0-10 (0000 - 1010)


  If we cannot afford to take care of Veterans, then we should stop making them.
  David C. Wilker Jr.
  USAF (RET)




  On Thu, Dec 3, 2009 at 18:24, WhyOSX <[email protected]> wrote:
  > Yes, 360 was the system they sent the Apollo project up with.
  > The other IBM things are unknown to me.
  > Born in '63 I've seen an after WW II world -
  > we'll have to learn, always have to...
  >
  >>My first machine was a Control Data 1604 in 1961. Six bits per byte and 7
  >>track tape with a bit for odd parity. Programming was done in octal. All 
caps
  >>FORTRAN came soon after.
  >>
  >>IBM introduced system 360 circa 1965, the full circle of computing 
capability.
  >>That came with 9 track tape and 8 bit bytes. Hexadecimal became the rule and
  >>the alphabet acquired lower case but ASCII only defined 7 bits out of the
  >>eight. EPSIDC character coding was an IBM-only thing and I probably spelled 
it
  >>wrong.
  >>
  >>The IBM 1620 used decimal arithmetic with 4 bit bytes limited to digits 0-9
  >>and plus and minus signs and what was effectively a space marking the end 
of a
  >>number. It was called BCD coding.
  >>which was used a lot in the 360's and later with two digits per 8-bit byte.
  >>
  >>As for current technology, there are still ASR33-like teletype machines
  >>around. They are 5 bits per byte.
  >>
  >>RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY
  >>--
  >>
  >>--> From the U S of A, the only socialist country that refuses to admit it.
  >
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