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PDP-6 and was
While the PDP-5 introduced a lower-cost line, 1963's PDP-6 was intended to take DEC into the mainframe market with a 36-bit machine.
Only 23 were sold, or 26 depending on the source, and unlike earlier models the low sales meant the PDP-6 was not improved with intermediate versions.
The PDP-10 was as much a success as the PDP-6 was a failure ; during its lifetime about 700 mainframe PDP-10s were sold before production ended in 1984.
The PDP-10 architecture was an almost identical version of the earlier PDP-6 architecture, sharing the same 36-bit word length and slightly extending the instruction set ( but with improved hardware implementation ).
See the " References " section on the LISP article — the 36-bit word size of the PDP-6 and PDP-10 was influenced by the programming convenience of having 2 LISP pointers, each 18 bits, in one word.
The instruction set was a slightly elaborated form of that of the PDP-6.
* DEC's PDP-6 was the world's first commercial time-sharing system Gordon Bell interview at the Smithsonian
Richard Greenblatt was the main developer of the original codebase for the PDP-6 ; Jonl White was responsible for its later maintenance and development.
Later MATHLAB was made available to users on PDP-6 and PDP-10 Systems running TOPS-10 or TENEX in universities.
DEC was initially interested, but soon ( 1966 ) announced they were in fact dropping the PDP-6 and concentrating solely on their smaller 18-bit and new 16-bit lines.
The PDP-6 was expensive and complex, and had not sold well for these reasons.
SHRDLU was written in the Micro Planner and Lisp programming language on the DEC PDP-6 computer and a DEC graphics terminal.
JOSS II, was developed by Charles L. Baker, Joseph W. Smith, Irwin D. Greenwald, and G. Edward Bryan for the PDP-6 computer between 1964 and February 1966.
The PDP-6 ( Programmed Data Processor-6 ) was a computer model developed by Digital Equipment Corporation ( DEC ) in 1963.
The PDP-6 was DEC's first " big " machine.
The PDP-6 supported time sharing through the use of a status bit selecting between two operating modes (" Executive " and " User ", with access to I / O, etc., being restricted in the latter ), and a single relocation / protection register which allowed a user's address space to be limited to a set section of main memory ( a second relocation / protection register for shareable " high segments " was added on the PDP-10 ).
There was also a great fear of powering off a PDP-6, since it would generally result in at least one 6205 board failing.
Stanford's PDP-6 was shown at DECUS in 1984.
The Fast Memory cabinet from the Stanford PDP-6 was part of that donation.
* DEC's PDP-6 was the worlds first commercial time-sharing system Gordon Bell interview at the Smithsonian
ITS was written in assembly, and initially developed for the Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-6 computer, and later moved to the PDP-10 once it became available, where it saw the majority of its development and use.
It was first implemented on the PDP-6 architecture by Harrison " Dit " Morse early in the 1960s.

PDP-6 and which
Most if not all PDP-6 systems were equipped with the optional Type 162 " Fast Memory ", which provided 16 memory locations constructed from discrete-transistor flip-flops.
In the 1950s-1970s the AI Group shared a computer room with a computer ( initially a PDP-6, and later a PDP-10 ) for which they built a time-sharing operating system called ITS.

PDP-6 and 1
* five 7-bit characters and 1 unused bit ( the usual PDP-6 / 10 convention, called five-seven ASCII )

PDP-6 and there
There is no evidence that the modules sold at the Boston computer museum gift shop were from the Stanford PDP-6, nor is there any evidence that the museum had ever had this machine in its possession.

PDP-6 and were
This and other experiences at TMRC, especially the influence of Alan Kotok, who worked at DEC and was the junior partner of the design team for the PDP-6 computer, led Greenblatt to the AI Lab, where he proceeded to become a " hacker's hacker " noted for his programming acumen as described in Steven Levy's Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution, and as acknowledged by Gerald Jay Sussman and Harold Abelson when they said they were fortunate to have been apprentice programmers at the feet of Bill Gosper and Richard Greenblatt
Pseudo terminals were present in the DEC PDP-6 Timesharing Monitor at least as early as 1967, and were used to implement batch processing.

PDP-6 and ).
RADIX-50's 40-character repertoire ( 050 in octal ) can encode 6 characters plus 4 additional bits into one 36-bit word ( PDP-6, PDP-10 / DECsystem-10, DECSYSTEM-20 ); 3 characters plus 2 additional bits into one 18-bit word ( PDP-9, PDP-15 ); or 3 characters in one 16-bit word ( PDP-11, VAX ).

was and infamous
The infamous Wansee Conference called by Heydrich in January 1942, to organize the material and technical means to put to death the eleven million Jews spread throughout the nations of Europe, was attended by representatives of major organs of the German state, including the Reich Minister of the Interior, the State Secretary in charge of the Four Year Plan, the Reich Minister of Justice, the Under Secretary of Foreign Affairs.
The most infamous of all was launched by the explosion of the island of Krakatoa in 1883 ; ;
Mary Peabody Mann served as a French instructor for a time. The school was briefly famous, and then infamous, because of his original methods.
In the first years of Claudius ’ reign, Claudius was married to the infamous Empress Valeria Messalina.
But these needed the infamous TRS-80 expansion interface, which was very expensive, and had a very unreliable floppy disk controller because it used the WD1771 floppy disc controller chip without an external " data separator ".
` Abdu ' l-Bahá accompanied his mother to visit Bahá ' u ' lláh who was then imprisoned in the infamous subterranean dungeon the Síyáh-Chál.
Like so many others, Étienne was eventually forced to flee Paris because of his opposition to the fiscal policies of Cardinal Richelieu, leaving his three children in the care of his neighbor Madame Sainctot, a great beauty with an infamous past who kept one of the most glittering and intellectual salons in all France.
Interestingly, however, Gongo Lutete himself was apparently sickened by the cannibalism of his own people, having been raised from an early age in Arab customs as a slave to the infamous Swahili-Zanzibari merchant Tippu Tip, who eventually freed Gongo in return for his bravery in battle.
It was probably in Rome that Catullus fell deeply in love with the " Lesbia " of his poems, who is usually identified with Clodia Metelli, a sophisticated woman from the aristocratic house of patrician family Claudii Pulchri and sister of the infamous Publius Clodius Pulcher.
The Riverside terracing, infamous for the fact that fans occupying it would turn their heads annually to watch The Boat Race pass, was replaced by what was officially named the ' Eric Miller Stand ', Eric Miller being a director of the club at the time.
Probably the most infamous moment in the White Sox rivalry was in 1994 when the White Sox confiscated Albert Belle's corked bat, and the ensuing attempt by Indians pitcher Jason Grimsley to crawl through the Comiskey Park ( now U. S. Cellular Field ) clubhouse ceiling to retrieve it.
An infamous Keith Moreland-Ed Lynch fight erupted after Lynch hit Moreland with a pitch, perhaps forgetting Moreland was once a linebacker at the University of Texas.
In 2003, the www. cpan. org domain name was redirected to Matt's Script Archive, a site infamous in the Perl community for having badly written code.
Whilst awaiting trial, Kidd was confined in the infamous Newgate Prison and wrote several letters to King William requesting clemency.
Coleco was infamous for its vaporware offerings.
Mipps then joined Syn in his quest for revenge, pursuing Tappitt and Imogene throughout the thirteen American colonies ( supposedly preaching the gospel to the Indians ) and around the world ( as part of a whaling voyage ) afterwards, and was with him in the Caribbean when Dr. Syn turned again to piracy, assuming the name of Captain Clegg ( taking the name " Clegg " from a certain vicious biting fly he had encountered in America ), hijacking his enemy Tappitt's own ship and crew and sailing off with them ( renaming the ship the Imogene ) to become the most infamous pirate of the day.
The most infamous dacoit was probably India's Phoolan Devi who authored an autobiography.
The most infamous dacoit was Sultana Daku in district Bijnor.
While in Wisconsin, he conducted multiple interviews with Ed Gein, the infamous serial killer who was a resident at Mendota State Hospital in Madison.
In August 1979 Macias ' nephew from Mongomo and former director of the infamous Black Beach prison, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, led a successful coup d ' état ; Macias was arrested, tried, and executed.
Its most infamous proponent and practitioner was, however, Adolf Hitler who praised and incorporated eugenic ideas in Mein Kampf and emulated Eugenic legislation for the sterilization of " defectives " that had been pioneered in the United States.
According to British legend ( see: Historia Brittonum ) the territory known later as Essex was ceded by the Britons to the Saxons following the infamous Brad y Cyllyll Hirion event which occurred ca.
The largest was called Royal Island, another St. Joseph ( after the patron saint of the expedition ), and the smallest of the islands, surrounded by strong currents, Île du Diable ( the infamous " Devil's Island ").
It was in the aftermath of 1968 that Guattari met Gilles Deleuze at the University of Vincennes and began to lay the ground-work for the soon to be infamous Anti-Oedipus ( 1972 ), which Michel Foucault described as " an introduction to the non-fascist life " in his preface to the book.

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