On Fri, Dec 4, 2009 at 3:27 AM, Gregg Eshelman <[email protected]> wrote:
> --- On Thu, 12/3/09, J. Alexander Jacocks <[email protected]> wrote:
> A system that almost made it out of the lab was a successor to the Atari 2600 
> which used 10 bit words.

Was that with a 6502 variant?

> If it's not 8 bits, it's not a byte, it's a "word". 4 bits is a nybble. 8 
> bits can also be called a word, which happens to be the same length as a byte.

You're getting modern :)

"Byte" was in established usage by some manufacturers long before it
settled on 8 bits.  See this hashed out at length by those who were
there on a.f.c.


> That's why the BinHex encoding for Macintosh files exists, because in the 
> early years of the Internet, some routers and gateways only passed 7 bits of 
> each byte, which seriously FUBARed any files that were full 8 bit. That 
> problem *should* no longer exist, but you can still find some sites offering 
> Macintosh files in both MacBinary (encoded with 8 bit extended ASCII 
> character set) and BinHex (encoded with "low" 7 bit ASCII character set) 
> which are always larger than MacBinary files.

I suspect that what became the internet was more the exception than
the rule at that time.  More company dial-in servers, bulletin boards,
and fidonet.

hawk
-- 
These opinions are mine.  Noone else may have them without paying my retainer.

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