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ELBRUS (COMPUTER)

'Elbrus' (Эльбрус) is the name (after the mountain) of a series of Soviet supercomputer systems developed by Elbrus MCST and/or ITMiVT since the 1970s; its current models are compatible with U.S.-developed SPARC designs.

★ ''Elbrus 1'' (1973) was the first Soviet integrated circuit computer, and the first fourth generation Soviet computer, developed by Vsevolod Burtsev. Used tag-based architecture and ALGOL as system language like the Burroughs large systems. It was used by the Defense Ministry. A side development was an update of the 1965 BESM-6 as Elbrus-1K2.

★ ''Elbrus 2'' (1977) was a 10-processor computer, considered the first Soviet supercomputer, with superscalar RISC processors. Re-implementation of the Elbrus 1 architecture with the fast ECL chips. It was used in the space program, nuclear weapons research, and defense systems.

★ ''Elbrus 3'' (1986) was a 16-processor computer developed by Boris Babaian. Differing completely from the architecture of both Elbrus 1 and Elbrus 2, it employed VLIW architecture.

★ ''Elbrus 2000'' or ''E2K'' was a vaporware project to implement Elbrus 3 architecture as a microprocessor.

★ The current SPARC-like systems have been developed from 1996 with the ''Elbrus-90micro'' and the company was formed under an agreement with Sun Microsystems in 1997. The company reported in 1998 the development of an innovative EPIC processor dubbed ''E2K'' by a team under Boris Babaian; little has been heard further as of 2007.

★ ''Elbrus 3m'' is a working implementation of the Elbrus 2000, 300 MHz

Contents
See also
External links

See also



Boris Babaian, Elbrus-3, Elbrus 2000 and Elbrus 3M chief architect

List of Soviet computer systems

External links



Elbrus website in Russian

Elbrus E2K

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