Computer Science News Sciencedaily
The MOS 6502 was introduced at a conference in San Francisco at a cost of $25, far less than comparable processors from Intel and Motorola, leading some attendees to believe that the company was perpetrating a hoax. The chip quickly became popular with designers of early personal computers like the Apple II and Commodore PET, as well as game consoles like the Nintendo Entertainment System. The 6502 and its progeny are still used today, usually in embedded applications. The Control Data Corporation performs up to 3 million instructions per second —three times faster than that of its closest competitor, the IBM 7030 supercomputer. Ibm's Roadrunner Supercomputer Is Completed Typically, computer users of the time fed their programs into a computer using punched cards or paper tape. Ross contended that a Flexowriter -- an electrically-controlled typewriter -- connected to an MIT computer could function as a keyboard input device due to its low cost and flexibility. An experiment co...