The GE 645 mainframe computer was a development of the GE 635 for use in the Multics project. This was the first computer that implemented a configurable hardware protected memory system. It was designed to satisfy the requirements of Project MAC to develop a platform that would host their proposed next generation time-sharing operating system (Multics) and to meet the requirements of a theorized computer utility.[1] The system was the first truly symmetric multiprocessing machine to use virtual memory, it was also among the first machines to implement what is now known as a translation lookaside buffer,[2][3][4] the foundational patent for which was granted to John Couleur and Edward Glaser.[5]
General Electric initially publicly announced the GE 645 at the Fall Joint Computer Conference[1][3] in November 1965. At a subsequent press conference in December[6][7] of that year it was announced that they would be working towards "broad commercial availability"[8] of the system. However they would subsequently withdraw it from active marketing at the end of 1966.[8] In total at least 6 sites ran GE 645 systems in the period from 1967 to 1975.[9]
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