• Aucun résultat trouvé

Computer Research

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Partager "Computer Research"

Copied!
2
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

XXXI. COMPUTER RESEARCH

Prof. J. B. Dennis

N. Kerllenevich

R. J. Levy

RESEARCH OBJECTIVES

The purpose of this group, which is operated jointly by the Research Laboratory of Electronics, the Electronic Systems Laboratory, and the Department of Electrical Engineering, M. I. T., is threefold:

1. To provide a flexible and readily accessible computation facility oriented toward the Laboratory's research goals.

2. To develop computation techniques, especially in the sense of increasing the convenience with which operating programs for particular tasks may be produced, and of allowing the scientist easy communication with the machine about tasks that are being performed for him.

3. To provide an education facility where students may learn the principles of automatic computation, and undergraduate and graduate theses and projects may be carried out.

Multi-user Computer Facility

During the past year, a multi-user computation facility built around the PDP-1 computer, which was given to the Department of Electrical Engineering, M. I. T., by the Digital Equipment Corporation, has been placed in operation. At present, the instal-lation permits three persons to encode, test, and operate programs from individual typewriter stations using symbolic languages. A flexible arrangement for the operation of external equipment by time-sharing programs has been included in the system. One application of this feature is the guidance of a high-gain antenna in celestial coordinates for experiments of the Radio Astronomy Group of the Research Laboratory of Electronics (see "Research Objectives," Sec. III). The tracking computation may proceed in parallel with use of the machine by the three on-line users.

A paper that presents the philosophy of the system and many details of its design has been prepared. 1 Information on the use of the facility is contained in internal memoranda2 - 7 which are available at the computer room.

J. B. Dennis References

1. J. B. Dennis, A multi-user computation facility for education and research, September 1963 (submitted for publication to Communs. ACM).

2. Memorandum PDP-6, Time-Shared Operation of the Electrical Engineering PDP-1 Computer, May 22, 1962.

3. Memorandum PDP-11-1, Programming the PDP-1 Computer, July 29, 1963. 4. MACRO Assembly Program for Programmed Data Processor-1 (PDP-1), Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard, Massachusetts, n. d.

This work is supported in part by the National Science Foundation (Grant G-16526), the National Institutes of Health (Grant MH-04737-03), and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NsG-496).

(2)

(XXXI. COMPUTER RESEARCH)

5. Memorandum PDP-4-1, DDT, February 15, 1962.

6. Memorandum PDP-5, Expensive Typewriter, April 18, 1962.

7. Memorandum PDP-16, Initial Time-Sharing System, August 8, 1963.

Références

Documents relatifs

When all results have arrived at the operating registers as a result of previously issued instructions, an exchange jump occurs to the exchange package

The EIA specification, in specif¥ing male connectors for data terminal equipment, envisions that each piece of data terminal equipmen~ will be connected to a

There are three phoneme types: phonemic segments (dened in the \Phonemes" section), oating tones (dened automatically based on the number of tones and optionally by

Virtual model control is a motion control language which uses simulationsof imagined mechanical components to create forces, which are applied through joint torques,

Preferred mode of editing (n=13; some projects express multiple preferences) The majority of ontology engineers questioned in our survey preferred an asynchronous approach to

are described: Contact, for the understanding of the distribution of the flux density in non linear magnetic circuit, Coufou, for the understanding of the

With the reduction in execution times of complex arithmetic operations roughly by factors of 50–800 % in digital signal and image processing applications, it is possible to

Table 5.7 lists potential actions as suggested by the optimization algorithm over the Maximal Utility model (Fig. 5.5) with dynamic benefit function and infinite change cost for