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On 10/29/10 00:04 , Dave Close wrote:
> Brandon S Allbery KF8NH wrote:
>> I'll add that "octet" is itself something of a leftover from when the 36-bit
>> dinosaurs walked the earth.
> 
> That doesn't seem right to me. Certainly 36-bit machines (and 12-bit and
> 18-bit ones) frequently divided instruction words into 3-bit units and
> used octal notation to represent them. But 36%8 != 0.

The standard convention on PDP10/20 was to split a 36-bit register into 4
9-bit registers; "octet" was largely intended to warn that that wouldn't
work well, and the alternative mapping (4 8-bit registers + 4 left over
bits) should be used.  (fwiw the other common encoding used on those
machines was 6 6-bit registers, used with RADIX-50 or SIXBIT.)

- -- 
brandon s. allbery     [linux,solaris,freebsd,perl]      [email protected]
system administrator  [openafs,heimdal,too many hats]  [email protected]
electrical and computer engineering, carnegie mellon university      KF8NH
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