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El número 117 de la revista enciclopédica ochentera ‘Mi Computer‘ anunciaba a bombo y platillo un chip que superaría el impacto que supuso la irrupción del transistor en los años cincuenta: el transputer, un pionero microprocesador diseñado y producido por la compañía británica Inmos, con sede en Bristol. El transputer (nombre derivado de transistor y …
Atari Explorer March/April 1988
This issue (which isn’t available on the Internet Archive, but can be found elsewhere) examined a desktop publishing option for the Atari ST, a more capable machine than some of the computers now promising that application. There were also several articles on graphics; the trip to the Louvre could be won by producing images with a particular program. The “Transputer” on the cover was “virtually a RISC device,” able to work in parallel, and promised to power the next generation of computers (from Atari, of course)...
L.I.P.S. S.Y.N.C.H.
Literary Interpretive Program and Simulation for the Synthetic Yield of Natural Communications between all Humans
LIPS SYNCH, most commonly referred to as "Lips" is a computer program, a bit of software that has its roots in a language called OCCAM.
OCCAM was created for the Transputer.
<font=#FF0080>Here we are nearly thirty years later, trying to match a cluster of old servers running Lips against human genius and shoe-horn her output onto the world's marketplaces and every bookshelf in every home on planet earth (Sheesh, why don't we pick something big for our first real test... why don't we...huh!??).