On 4/2/2011 9:01 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
There were also Forth chips, which let you run Forth in hardware. I believe they were much faster than Forth in software, but were killed by the falling popularity of Forth.
The Forth chips were cute, and got more done with fewer gates than almost anything else. But that didn't matter for long. Willow Garage has a custom Forth chip they use in their Ethernet cameras, but it's really a FPGA. A tagged machine might make Python faster. You could have unboxed ints and floats, yet still allow values of other types, with the hardware tagging helping with dispatch. But it probably wouldn't help all that much. It didn't in the LISP machines. John Nagle -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list