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== History and Usage == |
== History and Usage == |
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CRISP was produced in 1987, largely for experimental purposes. According to a major computing timeline{{Fact|date=December 2007}}, [[Apple Computer]] approached AT&T and paid them to develop a newer version of the CRISP suitable for low-power use in the [[Apple Newton|Newton]]. The Hobbit was produced as the '''92010''' in 1992 with a 3KB instruction buffer and the '''92020''' in 1994 with 6KB. Although it did not end up being used by Apple, it did see use in AT&T's own [[EO Personal Communicator]], an early [[Personal digital assistant|PDA]] running [[GO Corporation|GO Corporation's]] [[PenPoint OS|PenPoint]] operating system, as well as the earliest (unreleased) versions of the [[BeBox]]. With these exceptions there was almost no commercial use of the design, and production was ended. |
CRISP was produced in 1987, largely for experimental purposes. According to a major computing timeline{{Fact|date=December 2007}}, [[Apple Computer]] approached AT&T and paid them to develop a newer version of the CRISP suitable for low-power use in the [[Apple Newton|Newton]]. The Hobbit was produced as the '''92010''' in 1992 with a 3KB instruction buffer and the '''92020''' in 1994 with 6KB. Although it did not end up being used by Apple, it did see use in AT&T's own [[EO Personal Communicator]],<ref name="Kirkpatrick">{{cite web|url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1993/05/17/77857/index.htm|title=COULD AT&T RULE THE WORLD?|last=Kirkpatrick|first=David|date=1993-05-17|accessdate=2008-06-10}}</ref> an early [[Personal digital assistant|PDA]] running [[GO Corporation|GO Corporation's]] [[PenPoint OS|PenPoint]] operating system, as well as the earliest (unreleased) versions of the [[BeBox]]. With these exceptions there was almost no commercial use of the design, and production was ended. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 00:47, 10 June 2008
The Hobbit is a microprocessor design of the early 1990s from AT&T. It developed from their CRISP (C-language Reduced Instruction Set Processor) design that was in turn developed from the C Machine experimental efforts in the late 1980s at Bell Labs. C Machine, CRISP and Hobbit were optimized for running the C programming language. The design concentrated on fast instruction decoding, indexed array access and procedure calls. Although it was RISC-like in some aspects, it was an "oddball" design in most others. It failed to garner a successful market niche, and production ended in the mid-1990s with no serious commercial use. However, its concepts and ideas were used in, and inspired, more famous hardware.
Features
In a traditional RISC design, better referred to as load-store architecture, memory is accessed explicitly through commands that load data into registers and back out to memory. This allows the processor to clearly separate the movement of data from the processing done on it, making it easier to tune the instruction pipelines and add superscalar support. However, programming languages do not actually operate in this fashion. Generally they use a stack containing local variables and other information for subroutines known as a stack frame or activation record. The compiler writes code to create activation records using the underlying processor's load-store design.
The C Machine, and the CRISP and Hobbit that followed, directly supported the types of memory access that programming languages used. Instructions included the ability to talk directly to memory, notably structures within memory such as stack frames and arrays. Although this "memory-data" model was typical of the earlier CISC designs, in the C Machine data access was handled entirely via a stack of 64 32-bit registers; the registers were not otherwise addressable (in contrast with the INMOS Transputer and other stack-based designs). Using a stack for data access can dramatically reduce code size as there is no need to specify the location of the data needed by the instructions. On such a stack machine, most instructions implicitly use the data on the top of the stack. Higher code density means less data movement on the memory bus, improving performance.
One interesting side-effect of the Hobbit design was that it inspired designers of the Dis virtual machine (an offshoot of Plan 9) to use a memory-to-memory-based system that more closely matched the internal register-based workings of real-world processors. They found, as RISC designers would have expected, that without a load-store design it was difficult to improve the instruction pipeline and thereby operate at higher speeds. They felt that all future processors would thus move to a load-store design, and built Inferno to reflect this. In contrast, Java and .NET virtual machines are stack based, a side-effect of being designed by language programmers as opposed to chip designers. Translating from a stack based language to a register-based assembly language is a "heavyweight" operation; Java's virtual machine and compiler are many times larger and slower than the Dis virtual machine and the Limbo (the most common language compiled for Dis) compiler.[citation needed]
History and Usage
CRISP was produced in 1987, largely for experimental purposes. According to a major computing timeline[citation needed], Apple Computer approached AT&T and paid them to develop a newer version of the CRISP suitable for low-power use in the Newton. The Hobbit was produced as the 92010 in 1992 with a 3KB instruction buffer and the 92020 in 1994 with 6KB. Although it did not end up being used by Apple, it did see use in AT&T's own EO Personal Communicator,[1] an early PDA running GO Corporation's PenPoint operating system, as well as the earliest (unreleased) versions of the BeBox. With these exceptions there was almost no commercial use of the design, and production was ended.
External links
- The design of the Inferno virtual machine with references to the Hobbit
- The BeBox Zone - Prototype Hobbit BeBox Gallery
- Computer Industry Report 1992 article - Hobbit - AT&T Microelectronics' most visible new product - takes on Intel, ARM, Motorola, Microsoft - Intel Corp.; Motorola Inc.; Microsoft Corp
- Low End Mac - Sculley's Dream: The Story Behind the Newton, by Tom Hormby
- ^ Kirkpatrick, David (1993-05-17). "COULD AT&T RULE THE WORLD?". Retrieved 2008-06-10.