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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!unipalm!uknet!acorn!armltd!abaum
- From: abaum@armltd.uucp (Allen Baum)
- Newsgroups: comp.arch
- Subject: Re: HP-9100 (was HP-97 Calculator)
- Message-ID: <5647@armltd.uucp>
- Date: 21 Aug 92 13:29:33 GMT
- References: <11AUG199221494044@erin.caltech.edu> <1992Aug12.150333.10293@news.uiowa.edu>
- Organization: Advanced RISC Machines Ltd
- Lines: 35
-
- jones@pyrite.cs.uiowa.edu (Douglas W. Jones,201H MLH,3193350740,3193382879) writes:
-
- >From article <11AUG199221494044@erin.caltech.edu>,
- >by shoppa@erin.caltech.edu (TIM SHOPPA):
- >> ... my HP calculator (an
- >> old desktop unit, whose model number I can't recall right now, that has
-
- >You have a classic antique desktop computer, one of the first two
- >programmable calculators ever marketed! Save it and care well for it,
- >because it'll be a museum piece someday.
-
- >The diode matrix contains low level microcode [for] a digit serial processor
- >The middle layer microcode is stored in a braided wire memory;
-
- I agree! The HP9100A (the first machine I ever programmed) is amazing.
-
- I thought that the microcode was stored in an inductively coupled ROM, consisting of
- a 14 layer pc board, where the inner layer traces defined the bits. The Russians
- copied this calculator, which meant they had to peel back every layer of the PC board
- to do it.
-
- The digit serial processor was extremely primitive- it couldn't add, just increment or
- decrement a digit. Addition/subtraction was programmed from that, and multiplication,
- division, exps/trigs/etc. programmed from those.
-
- The logic family is interesting. The boards are masses of diodes, (& resistors) packed
- about as tightly as you could, with a few transistors here and there. It was discrete
- DTL logic, with additional feature that one of the inputs was the power supply, and
- it was wired up so that the input least likely to be turned on was the one connected
- to the power supply, to conserve power.
-
- --
-
- ----------------
- Allen J. Baum Apple Computer baum@apple.com, abaum@armltd.co.uk
-