GE-645

from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
GE-645

   <computer> A computer built by {General Electric}, the
   successor to the {GE-635}, designed to provide the extra CPU
   features required by the {Multics} project.

   The GE-645 was designed in 1965 by John Couleur and Edward
   Glaser at MIT.  It had several security levels and
   instructions for handling {virtual memory}.  Addressing used
   an 18-bit segment in addition to the 18-bit address,
   dramatically increasing the theoretical memory size and making
   virtual memory easier to support.

   Design of the GE-645's successor, the {GE-655}, started in 1967.

   (2006-09-24)
    

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