word -addressable processor - significado y definición. Qué es word -addressable processor
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Qué (quién) es word -addressable processor - definición

80'S/90'S HEBREW-ENGLISH WORD PROCESSING APPLICATION
Qtext; QText (word processor); QText(word processor)

Word addressing         
SUPPORT BY A HARDWARE ARCHITECTURE OF ACCESSING MEMORY ONLY IN UNITS OF WORDS LARGER THAN A BYTE
Word-addressable; Word machine; Word addressable; Word address; Fat address; Wide address
In computer architecture, word addressing means that addresses of memory on a computer uniquely identify words of memory. It is usually used in contrast with byte addressing, where addresses uniquely identify bytes.
Content-addressable parallel processor         
Content Addressable Parallel Processor
A content-addressable parallel processor (CAPP) also known as associative processor is a type of parallel processor which uses content-addressing memory (CAM) principles. CAPPs are intended for bulk computation.
Wordwise         
Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Wordwise Word Processor; Wordwise Word Processor
Wordwise is a word processor program published in 1981. It was the best selling word processor in the UK for the BBC Microcomputer during the 1980–1990 time period (~50,000 copies sold as of January 1985).

Wikipedia

QText

QText was a popular Hebrew-English word processing application for DOS in the late 1980s and early 90s. It was developed by Dvir Software from kibbutz Dvir, Israel, and programmed in Turbo Pascal.

QText was one of the first word processing applications that stored bi-directional text in logical order (by letter-typing-order and not visual order). It was also one of the first applications to support Hebrew filenames. In its DOS incarnations, the interface was text-based and did not offer WYSIWYG.

A Windows-compatible version of QText was released, but the brand faded out from the public as Windows gained popularity and Microsoft Word with Hebrew support became available. QText is no longer developed.

The DOS version of QText used encoding starting at the hexadecimal code 128d for the Aleph character.

An early version of their web pages (http://www.qtext.co.il/ at the Wayback Machine (archived 2 December 1998)) has a working (tested July 2011) link to a 30-day free trial of the Windows version.