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Page "Computing platform" ¶ 51
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** and SPARC
** SPARC ( v0. 9. 8 ), x86 ( v0. 9. 9 )
** SPARC Family
** SPARC Enterprise Servers
** BS2000-EBCDIC-based operating system for SPARC, x86 and S / 390-compatible systems

** and architecture
** Ability to run on an IA-64 architecture processor, although this never went beyond beta
** Minimum level required for POWER4 hardware and the last release that worked on the Micro Channel architecture
** Ability to run on 64-bit architecture CPUs
** Georgian architecture
** Exokernel, a research kernel architecture with a more minimalist approach to kernel technology.
** Superscalar architecture — The Pentium has two datapaths ( pipelines ) that allow it to complete two instructions per clock cycle in many cases.
** Roman architecture
** Norman architecture, styles of Romanesque architecture developed by the Normans
** Mughal architecture, a style of architecture
** Gibbs Brothers Medal-naval architecture, marine engineering
** SSE ( Streaming SIMD Extension ) has restrictions on data alignment ; programmers familiar with the x86 architecture may not expect this.
** Cathedral architecture
** Synagogue architecture
** Ted Hoff and Stan Mazor and Larry Potter ( IBM Chief Scientist of IBM ) proposed a single-chip implementation of the CTC architecture, using RAM register memory rather than shift register memory, and also added a few instructions and interrupt facility.
** Trellis ( architecture )
** Victorian architecture
** ARM architecture used in mobile devices
** Super Harvard architecture
** Harvard architecture
** Modified von Neumann architecture
** Gridiron — architecture, smart-building technology, feng shui
** Manyikeni – a Mozambiquean archaeological site believed to be part of the Great Zimbabwe tradition of architecture

** and computers
** Commodore Amiga, a family of personal computers introduced to the market in 1985 after Commodore International purchased the original developers, Amiga Corporation
** Commodore Semiconductor Group, also known as MOS Technology, Inc., famous for its various designs for Commodore Internationals range of home computers
** Human-computer interaction ( security ), the study of how people interact with computers concerning information security
** The first Apple II series computers go on sale.
** In Holmdel, New Jersey, scientists at Bell Labs announce they have created a digital optical processor that could lead to the development of superfast computers that use pulses of light rather than electric currents to make calculations.
** Nuclear false alarm: the NORAD computers and the Alternate National Military Command Center in Fort Ritchie, Maryland detected purported massive Soviet nuclear strike.
** Lotus 1-2-3 is released for IBM-PC compatible computers.
** controlling a large number of computers and directing them to attack as a group.
** The BIOS found in IBM-compatible personal computers
** Open Firmware, used in computers from Sun Microsystems, Apple, and Genesi
** ARCS ( computing ), used in computers from Silicon Graphics
** Kickstart, used in the Amiga line of computers ( POST, hardware init + Plug and Play auto-configuration of peripherals, kernel, etc.
** RTAS ( Run-Time Abstraction Services ), used in computers from IBM
** Windows for Workgroups used for networking peer-to-peer windows computers.
** Where a network of equipment or computers are interlinked through an MES ( Manufacturing Execution System )- or Host.
** Domain Name System ( DNS ), an hierarchical naming system for computers or any resource connected to the Internet
** CP / M computers based on the S-100 bus, maybe the earliest microcomputer platform
** David Cory, Amr Fahmy and Timothy Havel, and at the same time Neil Gershenfeld and Isaac L. Chuang at MIT published the first papers realising gates for quantum computers based on bulk spin resonance, or thermal ensembles.
** Stratus VOS, a fault-tolerant operating system used in Stratus computers
** Computer form factor, the industry-standard physical dimensions of the major components of computers
** Pizza box form factor, a style of case, usually wide and flat, for computers or network switches
** Dartmouth Time Sharing System ( Dartmouth College's DTSS for GE computers )
** Unics ( later Unix ) ( AT & T, initially on DEC computers )
** H-High speed ( still produced but generally superseded by the S-series, used in 1970s era computers )

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