Nord-5 was Norsk Data's first 32-bit machine and was claimed to be the first 32-bit minicomputer,[1] subject to various qualifications. It was described in company literature as an "auxiliary computer... monitored by two or more NORD-1 computers", this arrangement comprising the "NORD Integrated Computer System" or NORDIC system. It was arguably this more comprehensive configuration that supported such claims of achieving an industry first with the machine.[2]: iii Its successor, the Nord-50, was itself described as a "special purpose computer" and had a similar reliance on a Nord-10 host computer.[3]: I-I-I
Introduced in 1972, the Nord-5 was categorised in reporting as a "superminicomputer", described retrospectively as a "technological success but a commercial disaster",[4] eventually being superseded by the ND-500 family, announced in 1981.[5] Initially described as a larger version of the Nord-1 to compete with the UNIVAC 1106 and the IBM System/360 Model 44,[6] the machine used a Nord-1 as its front-end console processor, which ran the majority of the operating system.[7] Being designed for "high performance on number crunching", the machine could perform floating-point multiplication in around 1μs and division in around 8μs.[2]: iii The Nord-50 achieved a reported 0.5 million Whetstone instructions per second in benchmarking.[8]
nord5_instruction_set
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).