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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday October 24 2019, @04:27PM   Printer-friendly
from the an-organization-of-very-special-registers dept.

http://www.righto.com/2019/10/how-special-register-groups-invaded.html

Half a century ago, the puzzling phrase "special register groups" started showing up in definitions of "CPU", and it is still there. In this blog post, I uncover how special register groups went from an obscure feature in the Honeywell 800 mainframe to appearing in the Washington Post.

While researching old computers, I found a strange definition of "Central Processing Unit" that keeps appearing in different sources. From a book reprinted in 2017:1

"Central Processor Unit (CPU)—Part of a computer system which contains the main storage, arithmetic unit and special register groups. It performs arithmetic operations, controls instruction processing and provides timing signals."

At first glance, this definition seems okay, but a few moments thought reveals some problems. Storage is not part of the CPU. But more puzzling, what are special register groups? A CPU has registers, but "special register groups" is not a normal phrase.

It turns out that this definition has been used extensively for over half a century, even though it doesn't make sense, copied and modified from one source to another. Special register groups were a feature in the Honeywell 800 mainframe computer, introduced in 1959. Although this computer is long-forgotten, its impact inexplicably remains in many glossaries. The Honeywell 800 allowed eight programs to run on a single processor, switching between programs after every instruction.3 To support this, each program had a "special register group" in hardware, its own separate group of 32 registers (program counter, general-purpose registers, index registers, etc.).


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  • (Score: 3, Funny) by unitron on Friday October 25 2019, @05:02AM (1 child)

    by unitron (70) on Friday October 25 2019, @05:02AM (#911507) Journal

    ...one album on an obscure label, some underground buzz, a little bit of airplay on some of the early "freeform" FM stations, then they split due to "creative differences" about the time their van broke down during their tour, and they faded into oblivion.

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    something something Slashcott something something Beta something something
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  • (Score: 2) by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us on Friday October 25 2019, @01:54PM

    by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us (6553) on Friday October 25 2019, @01:54PM (#911630) Journal

    Yeah, they wrote and recorded all their tunes in that van. It was a central place for them to act as a unit to do all of their song processing. So when the group lost their CPU they had no choice but to disband.

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    This sig for rent.