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Guy Harris (talk | contribs) Non-restrictive clause - it's just *descriptive* - so use "which". |
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The '''IBM System/360 Model 20''' is the smallest member of the [[IBM System/360]] family announced in November 1964. The Model 20 supports only a subset of the System/360 instruction set, with binary numbers limited to 16 bits and no [[floating point arithmetic]].<ref name=FuncChar>{{cite book|publisher=IBM|id=A26-5847-3|title=IBM System/360 Model 20 Functional Characteristics|date=1967|url=http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/360/functional_characteristics/A26-5847-3_360-20_funChar_Apr67.pdf}}</ref> In later years it would have been classified as a 16-bit [[minicomputer
Developed by IBM in [[Böblingen]], Germany,<ref name=Pugh>{{cite book|last1=Pugh|first1=Emerson W.|last2=Johnson|first2=Lyle R.|last3=Palmer|first3=John H.|title=IBM's 360 and Early 370 Systems|year=1991|publisher=MIT Press|isbn=0-262-16123-0|url=https://archive.org/details/ibms360early370s0000pugh|url-access=registration}}</ref>{{rp|pp.217–218,352}} the system was intended for [[Computer data processing|data processing]] and as a replacement for [[Unit record equipment|tabulating equipment]]. An incompatible small computer, the [[IBM 1130]] introduced the following year, was designed for scientific and engineering computing.
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==Remaining machines==
Despite having been sold or leased in very large numbers for a [[mainframe computer|mainframe]] system of its era, only a few
* Two Model 20 processors along with numerous peripherals (forming at least one complete system) located in Nürnberg, Germany were purchased on [[eBay]] in April/May 2019 for €3710 by two UK enthusiasts who, over the course of some months, moved the machine to [[Creslow Park]] in [[Buckinghamshire]], United Kingdom. The system was in a small, abandoned building left untouched for decades, and apparently had been used in that building since all peripherals were still fully wired and interconnected.<ref name="ibms360">{{cite web|url=https://ibms360.co.uk/?page_id=22|title=Project History|website=IBM 360 Model 20 Rescue & Restoration|access-date=2019-05-20|year=2019}}</ref> As of September 2024 the systems have been moved on a long-term loan basis to the [[System Source Computer Museum]] in [[Hunt Valley, Maryland]], USA for display and restoration.<ref>{{cite web|title=The 360’s have a new home!|work=IBM 360 Model 20 Rescue & Restoration Blog|date=September 11, 2024|url = https://www.ibm360.co.uk/?p=916}}</ref>
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