Path: ...!news.mixmin.net!news2.arglkargh.de!news.karotte.org!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: ted@loft.tnolan.com (Ted Nolan ) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers,comp.os.linux.misc Subject: Re: evolution of bytes, The joy of FORTRAN Date: 3 Mar 2025 00:25:42 GMT Organization: loft Lines: 19 Message-ID: References: X-Trace: individual.net +lQq6FQJSX7JlWgq1CTGKw0uX+0GM2vyV7pV71PUv2N7fgLgVP X-Orig-Path: not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:4SfPlMA29meHaCwDXFOZ3sDAssw= sha256:Y0ZqmZwosOmsNxzMmgAVvWsxbx5TH6+dfK1uMkWOCw0= X-Newsreader: trn 4.0-test76 (Apr 2, 2001) Bytes: 1651 In article , Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote: >On Sun, 2 Mar 2025 20:34:09 -0000 (UTC), John Levine wrote: > >> S/360 brought us the addressable 8 bit byte packaged into 16 bit >> halfwords and 32 bit words, using the same addressing for each. > >Did any machine offer “byte” addressability with “byte” having >any meaning >other than “8-bit quantity”? As late as the last half of the 1980s, we ran some network operations on a BB&N C-70 machine with 10 bit bytes. It had a unix OS and I was able to compile stock "vi" on it (since it did not ship with it). As I recall the tape drive device nodes were something like /dev/mt0.8 and /dev/mt0.10 depending on what kind of bytes you wanted to write to tape... -- columbiaclosings.com What's not in Columbia anymore..