Electronika 60
Electronika 60M | |
Type | Microcomputer |
---|---|
Operating system | RT-11 and other |
CPU | M2 |
Memory | 4k 16-bit words; max 32k 16-bit words |
The Electronika 60 (Russian: Электроника 60) is a terminal computer made in the Soviet Union by Electronika in Voronezh. It is a clone of an LSI-11 (made by the Digital Equipment Corporation).
The Electronika 60 is a rack-mount unit that serves as a part of computing complex also comprising a 15IE-00-013 terminal and I/O devices. The main logic unit is located on the M2 CPU board.
M2 CPU Technical Characteristics:
- Word length: 16 bit
- Address space: 32K-words (64KB)
- RAM size: 4K-words (8KB)
- Number of instructions: 81
- Performance speed: 250,000 operations per second
- Floating point capacity: 32 bit
- Number of VLSI chips: 5
- Board dimensions: 240 × 280mm
The original implementation of Tetris was written for the Electronika 60 by Alexey Pajitnov. As the Elektra 60 has no graphics capability, text was used to form the blocks. [1]
References
- ↑ Hoad, Phil (June 2, 2014). "Tetris: how we made the addictive computer game". The Guardian.
External links
- Article about Electronika-60 in Russian
- Images of the Electronika 60M
- Archive software and documentation for Soviet computers UK-NC, DVK and BK0010.
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