> From: Swift Griggs > I see a lot of traffic about them on the list and I went out to > discover "why so cool?"
One word - 'crunch'. The 6600 especially, but also its successors (7600, etc) were _the_ number-crunching monsters of their day. For everyone who had a scientific/engineering application that needed lots of cycles - especially floating-point - that was _the_ machine to have. IBM tried to outdo them, but spent a fortune, and didn't really get there - the 360/9x was essentially a failure - only 15 /91's and 2 /95's were ever built. (And IBM was later sued for predatory sales practices for announcing them before they knew they could make them.) IBM just couldn't match Seymour Cray. Speaking of whom, the 6600 was the source of the famous Watson memory (and Cray's sarcastic response) - Google it! Noel