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mirror of https://github.com/pkimpel/retro-220.git synced 2026-01-13 07:10:08 +00:00
Paul Kimpel 4773bec4eb Update and reorganize 220 diagnostics tests from bitsavers.org.
1. Commit original paper tape images B220_Paper_Tapes.zip and
TR1101_TR1301.zip archives from
http://bitsavers.org/bits/Burroughs/B220/.
2. Update and reorganize software/Diagnostics folder; Add README.txt.
3. Commit Michael Mahon's consolidation of the TR1202..TR1206 tests as
Mahon-Regression-Test.pt.
4. Correct formatting of "*" (current assembler location) operand in
BAC-Disassembler.html.
5. Minor corrections to 220-Paper-Tape-Decoder.html.
6. Commit new 220-Format-Band-Disassembler.html script to generate BAC-
Assembler FBGR pseudo ops from memory images of Cardatron format bands.
2021-09-04 18:04:11 -07:00
2020-12-13 10:31:39 -08:00
2020-12-13 10:31:39 -08:00
2018-07-17 06:57:01 -07:00

The Burroughs 220 was a late-1950s, decimal, vacuum-tube, core-memory computer system. Some consider it to be the last of the major vacuum-tube computers.

The 220 was the follow-on product to the ElectroData/Burroughs Datatron 205. It was initially developed as the ElectroData Datatron 220 but renamed after Burroughs acquired ElectroData in 1956. The system was initially released in 1958. It did well with both scientific and commercial applications, but being a vacuum-tube system at the beginning of the transistorized era, was only modestly successful.

The ElectroData Division of Burroughs went on to create a number of successful systems after the 220, including the B100/200/300 series, the B1700/1800/1900 series, the B2000/3000/4000/V Series, the B5000/5500, and finally the B6000/7000/A Series, which are still produced and sold today as Unisys ClearPath MCP systems.

The main goal of this project is creation of a web browser-based emulator for the 220.

A second goal is reconstruction of the Burroughs Algebraic Compiler (BALGOL), an Algol-58 compiler written for the 220 by a team from Burroughs that included Joel Erdwinn, Jack Merner, Donald Knuth, Dave Dahm, and Clark Oliphint.

The contents of this project are licensed under the MIT License.

Related Sites URL
Emulator hosting site http://www.phkimpel.us/Burroughs-220/
Emulator documentation https://github.com/pkimpel/retro-220/wiki
Burroughs 205/220 blog http://datatron.blogspot.com
220 documents at bitsavers http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/electrodata/220/
BALGOL compiler listing http://archive.computerhistory.org/resources/text/Knuth_Don_X4100/PDF_index/k-1-pdf/k-1-u2196-balgol220compiler.pdf
Datatron 205 site http://www.phkimpel.us/ElectroData-205/
Description
Web-based emulator and operating environment for the Burroughs 220 computer system.
Readme 14 MiB
Languages
JavaScript 54.3%
HTML 38.9%
CSS 6.6%
Batchfile 0.2%