questions about bits and bytes

Paul_Koning/US/3Com%3COM at smtp1.isd.3com.com Paul_Koning/US/3Com%3COM at smtp1.isd.3com.com
Thu Apr 11 15:33:25 PDT 1996


>No, Bill, a "byte" has ALWAYS been 8-bits.  

Not so.

It appears that the term "byte" originated in the IBM 360, where
it is indeed 8 bits.  And certainly all present day computers use
"byte" to refer to an octet and not to any other size.  That has not
always been true.

The CDC 6000 series used 6-bit characters, though those weren't
usually referred to as "byte".  On the other hand, on the PDP10
there were "byte instructions" which would operate on an arbitrary
piece of the (36-bit) word.  On that machine, "bytes" when used to
store characters were often 9 bits long.  That's where things like
"meta" and "alt" started, see the Hacker's Dictionary.

 paul

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