

the HP 2115 (1967) slower, more I/O-limited, expandable to 8 K words.

the HP 2116 introduced in 1966, expandable to 32 K 16-bit words (originally 16 K words).

Within each division, several distinct models were produced: A wide range of operating systems run on these machines, from a simple 4 K word paper-tape-based monitor to a megaword multi-user, multiprogramming disc-based system and a multi-user time-shared BASIC system. All machines are 16-bit accumulator-oriented CISC machines running the same base instruction set. There are three major divisions within this family: the 21xx core-memory machines, the 1000 (originally 21MX) M/E/F-Series semiconductor-memory machines, and the 1000 L/A-Series distributed-I/O machines. Hewlett-Packard sold the HP 21xx/1000 family of real-time computers from 1966 through 2000. Simulators for the HP 2116, 2115, 2114, 2100, 1000 M/E/F-Series, and 3000 computer systems are supported here. The back end provides all of the machine-specific personality. SCP is responsible for the command interface to configure the simulated CPU and devices provided by the virtual machine. Internally, a SIMH simulator consists of a common front end, designated the Simulation Control Program (SCP), and a machine-specific back end, designated the virtual machine. See the Note on SCP Version 4 below for more details. Regression testing with the original HP diagnostics suites is performed only on the simulators available from this site. Any simulator reporting itself as "V4.x" or obtained from the source repository on GitHub is not authorized and not supported by the HP maintainer. These simulators are based on Bob Supnik's SIMH Version 3. They provide sufficient capability to run the original HP operating systems.
Hp2100 driver for mac Pc#
These simulators run on common PC and Mac platforms running Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, or macOS. This is the home of the Computer History Simulators (SIMH) for the Hewlett-Packard 21xx/10 computer systems.
