PDP-6 - meaning and definition. What is PDP-6
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What (who) is PDP-6 - definition

36-BIT MAINFRAME COMPUTER (1964–1966)
PDP 6

PDP-6         
<computer> Programmed Data Processor model 6. A computer designed around 1960 with more or less exactly the same hardware architecture as the PDP-10. It already had multi-user time sharing and batch processing and multi-level priority interrupts (1996-12-21)
Programmed Data Processor         
SERIES OF MINICOMPUTERS MADE AND MARKETED BY THE DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION FROM 1957 TO 1990
Programmable Data Processor; PDP-3; PDP 3; PDP-2; PDP 2; PDP 4; PDP 9; PDP 12; PDP 14; PDP 15; PDP 16; DEC PDP; PDP-H; DEC PDP-H
Programmed Data Processor (PDP), referred to by some customers, media and authors as "Programmable Data Processor,"
Programmed Data Processor         
SERIES OF MINICOMPUTERS MADE AND MARKETED BY THE DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION FROM 1957 TO 1990
Programmable Data Processor; PDP-3; PDP 3; PDP-2; PDP 2; PDP 4; PDP 9; PDP 12; PDP 14; PDP 15; PDP 16; DEC PDP; PDP-H; DEC PDP-H
<computer> (PDP) Early (1960's?) {Digital Equipment Corporation} family of minicomputers. The best known ranges were the PDP-10 and PDP-11. PAL was the {assembly language}. (1997-11-21)

Wikipedia

PDP-6

The PDP-6, short for Programmed Data Processor model 6, is a computer developed by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) during 1963 and first delivered in the summer of 1964. It was an expansion of DEC's existing 18-bit systems to use a 36-bit data word, which was at that time a common word size for large machines like IBM mainframes. The system was constructed using the same germanium transistor-based System Module layout as DEC's earlier machines, like the PDP-1 and PDP-4.

The system was designed with real-time computing use in mind, not just batch processing as was typical for most mainframes. This made it popular in university settings and its support for the Lisp language made it particularly useful in artificial intelligence labs like Project MAC at MIT. It was also complex, expensive, and unreliable as a result of its use of so many early-model transistors. Only 23 were sold, at prices ranging from $120,000 to $300,000.

The lasting influence of the PDP-6 was its re-implementation using modern silicon transistors and the newer Flip-Chip module packaging to produce the PDP-10. The instruction sets of the two machines are almost identical. The PDP-10 was less expensive and more reliable, and about 1500 were sold during its lifetime.