CDC 6600
The
CDC 6600 was a
mainframe computer from
Control Data Corporation built in 1965. It is generally considered to be the first
supercomputer and completely outperformed all other machines in the world by a wide margin, typically 10 to 1. It it generally agreed to have been the world's fastest computer from 1965 to 1969, when it was replaced by its own successor, the CDC 7600.
The CDC 6600 was designed by Seymour Cray as soon as work had completed on the CDC 3600, a much smaller computer. With sales of their other machines doing well, CDC allowed Cray as much time as he liked to build his next design.
The basis for the 6600 is what we would today refer to as a RISC system, one in which the processor is tuned to do instructions which are comparatively simple. The philosohy of many other machines was toward using instructions which were complicated - for example, which would fetch an operand from memory and add it to a value in a register. In the 6600, loading the value from memory would require one instruction, and adding it would require a second.
To handle the "day to day" tasks which other designs put in the CPU, Cray included in the 6600 10 copies of another kind of processor, based in many ways on his earlier computer, the 160A. These machines, called peripheral processors, or PPUs, were full computers in their own right, but tuned to performing I/O tasks, and running the operating system. When the main CPU needed to perform some sort of I/O, it instead sent (or loaded) a small program into one of these other machines.
External Links
In the News
Wired Test 2007: Digital Cameras, Casio's Pocket Cam a Superfast Shot Wired tests the latest in digital cams, the speedy Casio Exilim Zoom. New Understanding Of Basic Units Of Memory A molecular "recycling plant"permits nerve cells in the brain to carry out two seemingly contradictory functions -- changeable enough to record new experiences, yet permanent enough to maintain these memories over time. The Roman Curia: Congregations: Congregation for the Doctrine of the F Information from the Vatican about this group "founded in 1542 by Pope Paul III ... [which] was originally called the Sacred Congregation of the Universal Inquisition as its duty was to defend the Church from heresy. It is the oldest of the Curia's nine congregations."Includes a brief profile, doctrinal and disciplinary documents, and related material, some of which are by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI). Many of the documents are available in several languages (some not in English). Soapbox Needs a Little Sparkle Microsoft's entry into the wonderful world of video sharing takes most of its cues from everybody's favorite clip joint, YouTube. And that's precisely the problem. Review by Michael Calore. Freedom Flight: Black South African Kid's Homemade Paraglider Leads to South African Cyril Mazibuko is a professional paraglider, one of the few black practitioners of a predominantly white sport. After seeing gliders in the air as a kid, he makes a glider out of plastic bags and baling wire, catches the attention of the pros, and flies in the face of apartheid. Tone Deafness Explained Do people cringe when you sing? You've got company. But researchers have found that only 1 in 20 people truly has amusia, the technical term for tone deafness. Tests have shown that some people with bad singing voices hear music just fine. Amusics are a smaller group with a perceptual problem: They can't pick out differences in pitch or follow the simplest tunes. NIH Funds Are for Research Naysayers argue that embryonic stem-cell research deserves no federal funding because it has shown no success. Neither have other heavily funded research programs. By Brandon Keim. PET Scans Can Accurately Detect A Breast Tumor's Response To Chemother Positron emission tomography that uses a radioactive sugar molecule is more useful than mammography and ultrasound in predicting a breast tumor's response to chemotherapy and, therefore, the patient's ultimate likelihood of survival. Chuck Yeager.com Official website for aviator Chuck Yeager, who was the first person to break the sound barrier, in October 1947. Features an extensive timeline of Yeager's life and achievements, a FAQ, photos, stories, a calendar of his appearances, and details about his charitable foundation. Includes some commercial content. Taking the P Sciencebase readers of a certain age will know exactly what I’m talking about if I were to ask, “Can I have a P, please, Bob?” The Bob in question being host of a TV game show for teens too long ago into my past for me to admit when. The Bob in question was almost [...]
MP3 Music Downloads
Preview songs, Download Free Music,Burn CDs at ITunes.com

|