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CDC 7600 - Wikipedia
From about 1969 to 1975, the CDC 7600 was generally regarded as the fastest computer in the world, [7] except for specialized units. However, even with the advanced mechanicals and …
CDC 7600 | Computational and Information Systems Lab
NCAR took delivery of CDC 7600 – serial number 12 – in May 1971, just before the Mesa Laboratory's computer facility complex was expanded in July. The CDC 7600 had a small-core …
The 7600 system is designed to accommodate multiple operating stations. New peripheral equipment configurations are being developed which will operate from programable equipment …
The arrival of the first CDC 7600 continued a long period of Livermore leadership in computing and custom software development for nuclear design and plasma simulations. The innovative …
CDC 7600 -- Mark Smotherman - Clemson University
With a speed of just over 10 Mips (millions of instructions per second) and superb floating-point performance, the 7600 was, for its time, a veritable "Ferrari" of computing. But it was a Ferrari …
Seymour Cray: The Man Who Brought Style to Supercomputers
2017年9月14日 · The CDC 7600 was the brainchild of Seymour Cray, who from the 1950s through the 1980s was the undisputed champion among supercomputer designers. Working …
CDC::7600::Preliminary Reference Manual : CDC Corporation : Free ...
2017年2月27日 · computers, cdc, cdc 7600, computer manuals, computer documentation, cray, seymour cray Collection manuals_various; manuals; additional_collections Language English …
Seymour Cray: The Man Who Brought Style to Supercomputers
2017年7月28日 · The CDC 7600 was the brainchild of Seymour Cray, who from the 1950s through the 1980s was the undisputed champion among supercomputer designers. Working …
Computers: CDC 7600 [Control Data Corporation], 1971-1983
(1316) Documentation of CDC 7600: 1) Readying computer area for CDC 7600, April 7, 1971, 2) Moving generator into building, 3) Arrival of CDC 7600, May 24, 1971, 4) Keypunch, no carpet, …
CDC 7600 - IT History Society
The CDC 7600 was the Seymour Cray-designed successor to the CDC 6600, extending Control Data's dominance of the supercomputer field into the 1970s. The 7600 ran at 36.4 MHz (27.5 …