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FIELDATA (also
written as
Fieldata) was a
pioneering computer project run by the US Army
Signal Corps in the late 1950s that
intended to
create a single...
- and
route information as one part of the
United States Army's
Fieldata concept.
Fieldata aimed to
automate the
distribution of
battlefield data in any...
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allowing code extension—was
specified as ECMA-1 in 1963 (see below).
FIELDATA was a seven-bit code (with
optional parity) of
which only 64 code positions...
- U.S.
military defined its
Fieldata code, a six-or seven-bit code,
introduced by the U.S. Army
Signal Corps.
While Fieldata addressed many of the then-modern...
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cards with data for
early computer systems). It was also
included in the
FIELDATA character encoding and the
ASCII standard. In economics, the use of an...
- (CCITT)
International Telegraph Alphabet No. 2 (ITA2)
standard of 1932,
FIELDATA (1956[citation needed]), and
early EBCDIC (1963), more than 64
codes were...
- six-bit
codes for
printable graphic patterns common in the U.S. Army (
FIELDATA) and Navy.
These representations included alphanumeric characters and special...
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mantissa Alphanumeric FIELDATA –
UNIVAC 6-bit code
variant (no
lower case characters) six
characters in each 36-bit word. (
FIELDATA was
originally a seven-bit...
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Other six-bit
encodings with
completely different mappings, such as some
FIELDATA variants or Transcode, are
sometimes incorrectly termed BCD. Many variants...
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Teletypewriter code (USTTY).
Other standards, such as
Teletypesetter (TTS),
FIELDATA and Flexowriter, had six holes. In the
early 1960s, the
American Standards...