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The IBM 650 ( photo ) was one of , and over 2000 systems were produced between the first shipment in 1954 and its final manufacture in 1962 . Support for the 650 and its component units was withdrawn in 1969 .

The 650 is a two-address, Bi-quinary Coded Decimal machine (both data and addresses were decimal), with memory on a rotating Drum . The 650 was specifically designed for users of existing IBM Unit Record Equipment (electro-mechanical Punched Card -processing machines) upgrading from so-called Calculating Punches, like the IBM 604 model, to computers proper.


HARDWARE


The basic 650 system consisted of three components:

  • Disk Unit ( IBM 355 )

  • Card Reader Unit (IBM 543 )

  • Card Punch Unit (IBM 544 )

  • Control Unit ( IBM 652 ) Magnetic Tape Controller

  • Auxiliary Unit ( IBM 653 ) Core storage, index registers, floating point arithmetic

  • Auxiliary Alphabetic Unit (IBM 654 )

  • Magnetic Tape Unit ( IBM 727 )

  • Inquiry Station ( IBM 838 )

  • Tape To Card Punch IBM 46 Model 3

  • Tape To Card Punch IBM 47 Model 3

  • Alphabetical Accounting Machine IBM 407


The rotating , the non-optimized average access time was 2.5 Ms ). Because of this timing restriction, the second address in each instruction word was the address of the next instruction. Programs could be ''optimized'' by placing instructions around the drum based on the expected execution time of the previous instruction. One specialized instruction, 'Table lookup', could high-equal compare a reference 10 digit word with 46 consecutive following words on the drum in one 5ms revolution and then switch to the next track in time for the next 46 words (there were fifty words per track/revolution). This feat was only three times slower than on a one-thousand times faster binary machine in 1963 (1500 microsecs on the IBM7040 to 5000 microsecs on the IBM650 for looking up 46 entries as long as both were programmed in assembler. One higher level language made the IBM7040 dramatically slower at table-look-up.


The optional Auxiliary Unit (IBM 653), was introduced on May 3 , 1955 , providing up to three features:
  • 60 10-digit words of Magnetic Core memory at addresses 9000 to 9059; a small ''fast memory'' (this device gave a memory access time of 96 µs , a 26-fold raw improvement relative to the rotating drum), needed for a tape and disk I/O buffer

  • 3 4-digit Index Register s at addresses 8005 to 8007; drum addresses were indexed by adding 2000, 4000 or 6000 to them, core addresses were indexed by adding 0200, 0400 or 0600 to them. If the system had the 4000 word memory drum then indexing was by adding 4000 to the first address for index reg A, adding 4000 to the second address for index reg B, and by adding 4000 to each of the two addresses for index reg C. (the indexing for 4000 word systems only applied to the first address). The 4000 word systems required transistorized read/write circuitry for the drum memory and were available before 1963.

  • Floating Point – arithmetic instructions with 8 digit mantissa and 2 digit characteristic (offset exponent) – MMMMMMMMCC, providing a range of ±0.10000000E-50 to ±0.99999999E+49

  • The IBM533 reader punch unit could only read a maximum of 26 columns of alphnumerics from cards in mostly fixed columns. An expansion allowed more but certainly not over 50, as only ten words could be read from a card (5 characters per word).


The IBM 650 (pictured here) at the ''Haus zur Geschichte der IBM Datenverarbeitung'' (House for the History of IBM
Data Processing), Sindelfingen, is still running (as of May 2004) and will process an income tax program of the time, with input and output on punched cards.

The IBM 7070 , announced 1960, was designed to provide a "transistorized IBM 650" upgrade path.

''See also'':


SOFTWARE

Software included:
  • BLIS ( Bell Laboratories Interpretive System)HOPL shows the name as ''BLISS''; a definitive source has not been located, which used a numeric-only three-address approach

  • IPL the first list processing language.

  • SPACE (Simplified Programming Anyone Can Enjoy) which was a business-oriented two-step compiler (through SOAP)



REFERENCES



EXTERNAL LINKS

  • [http://www-1.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/650/650_intro.html IBM Archives: Workhorse of Modern Industry: The IBM 650] Includes a chronology, technical specifications, representative customers, and applications the 650 was used for.

  • The IBM 650 at Columbia University

  • An IBM 650 Simulator

  • Sindelfingen Scroll down to ''House for the History of the IBM data processing'' where the working IBM 650 pictured above is located. See also History Galore at IBM Museum .

  • -- broken links




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