Difference between revisions of "Computer Control Corporation"
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					|  (Name under Honeywell; a captions to external links; +cat) |  (Explain CCC, 3C, and DDP.  Add category.) | ||
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| − | '''Computer Control Corporation'''  | + | '''Computer Control Corporation'''—CCC or 3C for short—made the DDP-116 which was first in a family of 16-bit [[minicomputer]]s.  When [[Honeywell]] bought the company in 1966, it was renamed to Honeywell's 'Computer Control Division'; the family was called '''Series 16'''.  DDP means digital data processor. | 
| The Honeywell 516 and 316 were used as [[Interface Message Processor]]s in the [[ARPANET]]. | The Honeywell 516 and 316 were used as [[Interface Message Processor]]s in the [[ARPANET]]. | ||
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| [[Category: Computer Manufacturers]] | [[Category: Computer Manufacturers]] | ||
| + | [[Category: 16-bit Computers]] | ||
Revision as of 08:13, 9 July 2025
Computer Control Corporation—CCC or 3C for short—made the DDP-116 which was first in a family of 16-bit minicomputers. When Honeywell bought the company in 1966, it was renamed to Honeywell's 'Computer Control Division'; the family was called Series 16. DDP means digital data processor.
The Honeywell 516 and 316 were used as Interface Message Processors in the ARPANET.
The Prime 200 was a clone of the DDP-516.
External links
- ComputerControlCompany - documentation at Bitsavers (extensive)
- The 3C Legacy Project
- Honeywell Series 16 - fairly complete documentation archive, along with much else
- Honeywell DDP-116

