- AN/USQ-17
The AN/USQ-17 or
Naval Tactical Data System (NTDS) computer referred to inSperry Rand documents as the Univac M-460, wasSeymour Cray 's last design forUNIVAC . UNIVAC later released a commercial version, the UNIVAC 490 and that system was later upgraded to a multiprocessor configuration as the 494.The machine was the size and shape of a
bathtub , about four feet high (roughly 1.20 meters), with a hinged lid for access. However, shortly after completing the design Cray left to joinControl Data Corporation . So when the Navy awarded Sperry Rand a US$50 million contract to build the AN/USQ-17, the loss of the engineers that understood the machine forced Sperry to redesign the entire machine from scratch (retaining theinstruction set so that programs developed for the original machine would still run on the new one).As part of the redesign it was decided to improve access, and the second version was designed to stand upright, like an old fashioned double-door
refrigerator , about six feet tall (roughly 1.80 m). This new design was designated theAN/USQ-20 .Instructions were represented as 30-bit words, in the following format: f 6 bits function code j 3 bits jump condition designator k 3 bits partial word designator b 3 bits which index register to use y 15 bits operand address in memory
Numbers were represented as 30-bit words, this allowed for five 6-bit alphanumeric characters per word.
The main memory was 32,768 = 32
K words ofcore memory .The available
processor register s were:
*One 30-bit accumulator (A).
*One 30-bit Q register (combined with A to give a total of 60 bits for the result of multiplication or the dividend in division).
*Seven 15-bitindex register s (B1–B7).The instruction format defined for the AN/USQ-17 marked the beginning of an instruction set which would be carried on, with many changes along the way, into later UNIVAC computers including the
UNIVAC 1100/2200 series which is still in use today.ee also
*
List of UNIVAC products
*History of computing hardware External links
* [http://ed-thelen.org/comp-hist/UNIVAC-M-640.html "The Univac M-460 Computer"] – Paper by J. E. Thornton, M. Macaulay, and D. H. Toth, Remington Rand Univac Division of Sperry Rand (on-line version from Ed Thelen's Antique Computer Home Page)
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