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Fieldata information


FIELDATA character encoding
Military primary (1xxxxxx) code, a representative military supervisory (0xxxxxx) code, UNIVAC graphical code.
Classification7-bit or 6-bit basic Latin encoding
Preceded byITA 2
Succeeded byUS-ASCII

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 standard (as defined in MIL-STD-188A/B/C[1][2][3][4]) for collecting and distributing battlefield information. In this respect it could be thought of as a generalization of the US Air Force's SAGE system that was being created at about the same time.

Unlike SAGE, FIELDATA was intended to be much larger in scope, allowing information to be gathered from any number of sources and forms. Much of the FIELDATA system was the specifications for the format the data would take, leading to a character set that would be a huge influence on ASCII a few years later.[1][5] FIELDATA also specified the message formats and even the electrical standards for connecting FIELDATA-standard machines together.

Another part of the FIELDATA project was the design and construction of computers at several different scales, from data-input terminals at one end, to theatre-wide data processing centers at the other. Several FIELDATA-standard computers were built during the lifetime of the project, including the transportable MOBIDIC from Sylvania, and the BASICPAC and LOGICPAC from Philco. Another system, ARTOC, was intended to provide graphical output (in the form of photographic slides),[6][7][8] but was never completed.

Because FIELDATA did not specify codes for interconnection and data transmission control, different systems (like "STANDARD FORM", "COMLOGNET Common language code", "SACCOMNET (465L) Control Code"[9][5]) used different control functions. Intercommunication between them was difficult.[1]

FIELDATA is the original character set used internally in UNIVAC computers of the 1100 series, each six-bit character contained in six sequential bits of the 36-bit word of that computer. The direct successor to the UNIVAC 1100 is the Unisys 2200 series computers, which used FIELDATA (although ASCII is now also common with each character encoded in 1/4 of a word, or 9 bits). Because some of the FIELDATA characters are not represented in ASCII, the Unisys 2200 uses '^', '"' and '_' characters for codes 004oct, 076oct and 077oct respectively.

The FIELDATA project ran from 1956[citation needed] until it was stopped during a reorganization in 1962.[citation needed]

  1. ^ a b c Mackenzie 1980.
  2. ^ Military Communication System Technical Standard, MIL-STD-188A, 1958-04-25
  3. ^ Military Communication System Technical Standard, MIL-STD-188B, 1964-02-24
  4. ^ Military Communication System Technical Standard, MIL-STD-188C, 1969-11-24
  5. ^ a b Jennings 2020.
  6. ^ Kent, Allen; Lancour, Harold (1971). Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 5 - Circulation to Coordinate Indexing. CRC Press. pp. 395, 398. ISBN 9780824720056.
  7. ^ "Army Tactical Operations Central (ARTOC) information system". sr-ix.com.
  8. ^ "THE ARTOC". Man in Command Information Processing Systems--A Research Program. 1963. pp. 1–4.
  9. ^ International Telephone & Telegraph Corporation (ITT) (1968). Reference Data for Radio Engineers (5 ed.). Howard W. Sams and Co. pp. Appendix. ISBN 978-0-672-20678-8. Retrieved 2016-05-23.

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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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MOBIDIC

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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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Asterisk

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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...

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ASCII

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(CCITT) International Telegraph Alphabet No. 2 (ITA2) standard of 1924, FIELDATA (1956[citation needed]), and early EBCDIC (1963), more than 64 codes were...

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Byte

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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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ISO basic Latin alphabet

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Needle Morse Non-Latin Wabun/Kana Chinese Cyrillic Korean Baudot and Murray Fieldata ASCII ISO/IEC 646 BCDIC Teletex and Videotex/Teletext T.51/ISO/IEC 6937...

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UNIVAC

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Corporation FASTRAND History of computing hardware List of UNIVAC products FIELDATA Unisys BINAC, mentioned above, was the first. Brinkley, Alan. American...

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Baudot code

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Classification 5-bit stateful[citation needed] basic Latin encoding Preceded by ITA1 Succeeded by FIELDATA, ITA 3 (van Duuren code), ITA 5 (ISO 646, ASCII) v t e...

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Teleprinter

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codes, but were hard to synchronize mechanically). Other codes, such as FIELDATA and Flexowriter, were introduced but never became as popular as ITA2. Mark...

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Punched tape

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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...

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SAC

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cyclase SA-C programming language S.A.C. (control code), in the 1950s FIELDATA SAC programming language Special Administration Console of Windows Emergency...

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Philco computers

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built for the US Army as transportable computer systems for use with their Fieldata concept of integrated information management. BASICPAC was a transistorized...

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Outline of computing

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ASCII – Unicode – Multibyte – EBCDIC (Widecharacter, Multicharacter) – FIELDATA – Baudot Data compression Digital signal processing Image processing Data...

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Univac Text Editor

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UNIVAC text editor processor. The current editor works with ASCII and Fieldata. This editor is a descendant of the project MAC editor at MIT. It enables...

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UNIVAC FASTRAND

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by 50%. Storage capacity: 22,020,096 36-bit words = 132,120,576 6-bit FIELDATA characters = 99 megabytes (8-bit bytes) per device Drum rotation rate:...

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Charset detection

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Needle Morse Non-Latin Wabun/Kana Chinese Cyrillic Korean Baudot and Murray Fieldata ASCII ISO/IEC 646 BCDIC Teletex and Videotex/Teletext T.51/ISO/IEC 6937...

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