AN/UYK-44

The AN/UYK-44 is the standard 16-bit minicomputer of the United States Navy. The AN/UYK-44 was developed in the early 1980s by Sperry Corporation and was completed in early 1984. The AN/UYK-44 was used in surface ships, submarines, ground C4I platforms, radar and missile control systems.[1] The system was designed to replace the older AN/UYK-20 model.

Technical specifications

The AN/UYK-44 had 2 million words (approximately 2 MB in modern terms) of memory and operated at 0.9 MIPS.[2]

The system has relatively large I/O capability and has a MIL-STD-1397 point-to-point I/O bus running at 250K words/s.[3] The system was built around the use of "Standard Electronic Modules" (SEM) for logic implementation. These modules had double-sided surface mount integrated circuits and ceramic substrates for interconnect and cooling.[4]

gollark: > PDF
gollark: For basically everyone it's a worse deal since nobody actually reads that many books, but you don't pay *per book* so something something cheaper exploration.
gollark: Amazon have a thing called Kindle Unlimited which is basically "you can have 10 books at a time from a fairly large set of books for a flat monthly rate".
gollark: Ethical*!
gollark: I don't think anyone actually does the pay-per-song thing because they don't offer it.

See also

References



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.