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moby

moby


  2  definitions  found 
 
  From  Jargon  File  (4.2.3,  23  NOV  2000)  [jargon]: 
 
  moby  /moh'bee/  [MIT:  seems  to  have  been  in  use  among  model 
  railroad  fans  years  ago.  Derived  from  Melville's  "Moby  Dick"  (some 
  say  from  `Moby  Pickle').  Now  common.]  1.  adj  Large  immense, 
  complex,  impressive.  "A  Saturn  V  rocket  is  a  truly  moby  frob." 
  "Some  MIT  undergrads  pulled  off  a  moby  hack  at  the  Harvard-Yale  game." 
  (See  {Appendix  A}  for  discussion.)  2.  n.  obs.  The  maximum  address 
  space  of  a  machine  (see  below).  For  a  680[234]0  or  VAX  or  most  modern 
  32-bit  architectures,  it  is  4,294,967,296  8-bit  bytes  (4  gigabytes). 
  3.  A  title  of  address  (never  of  third-person  reference),  usually  used 
  to  show  admiration,  respect,  and/or  friendliness  to  a  competent  hacker. 
  "Greetings,  moby  Dave.  How's  that  address-book  thing  for  the  Mac  going?" 
  4.  adj  In  backgammon,  doubles  on  the  dice,  as  in  `moby  sixes',  `moby 
  ones',  etc  Compare  this  with  {bignum}  (sense  3):  double  sixes  are 
  both  bignums  and  moby  sixes,  but  moby  ones  are  not  bignums  (the  use  of 
  `moby'  to  describe  double  ones  is  sarcastic).  Standard  emphatic  forms: 
  `Moby  foo',  `moby  win',  `moby  loss'.  `Foby  moo':  a  spoonerism  due  to 
  Richard  Greenblatt  5.  The  largest  available  unit  of  something  which 
  is  available  in  discrete  increments.  Thus  ordering  a  "moby  Coke" 
  at  the  local  fast-food  joint  is  not  just  a  request  for  a  large  Coke, 
  it's  an  explicit  request  for  the  largest  size  they  sell 
 
  This  term  entered  hackerdom  with  the  Fabritek  256K  memory  added  to 
  the  MIT  AI  PDP-6  machine,  which  was  considered  unimaginably  huge  when 
  it  was  installed  in  the  1960s  (at  a  time  when  a  more  typical  memory 
  size  for  a  timesharing  system  was  72  kilobytes).  Thus  a  moby  is 
  classically  256K  36-bit  words  the  size  of  a  PDP-6  or  PDP-10  moby. 
  Back  when  address  registers  were  narrow  the  term  was  more  generally 
  useful,  because  when  a  computer  had  virtual  memory  mapping,  it  might 
  actually  have  more  physical  memory  attached  to  it  than  any  one  program 
  could  access  directly.  One  could  then  say  "This  computer  has  6  mobies" 
  meaning  that  the  ratio  of  physical  memory  to  address  space  is  6, 
  without  having  to  say  specifically  how  much  memory  there  actually  is 
  That  in  turn  implied  that  the  computer  could  timeshare  six  `full-sized' 
  programs  without  having  to  swap  programs  between  memory  and  disk. 
 
  Nowadays  the  low  cost  of  processor  logic  means  that  address  spaces 
  are  usually  larger  than  the  most  physical  memory  you  can  cram  onto 
  a  machine,  so  most  systems  have  much  _less_  than  one  theoretical 
  `native'  moby  of  {core}.  Also  more  modern  memory-management  techniques 
  (esp.  paging)  make  the  `moby  count'  less  significant.  However,  there 
  is  one  series  of  widely-used  chips  for  which  the  term  could  stand  to  be 
  revived  --  the  Intel  8088  and  80286  with  their  incredibly  {brain-damaged} 
  segmented-memory  designs.  On  these  a  `moby'  would  be  the  1-megabyte 
  address  span  of  a  segment/offset  pair  (by  coincidence,  a  PDP-10  moby 
  was  exactly  1  megabyte  of  9-bit  bytes). 
 
 
 
  From  The  Free  On-line  Dictionary  of  Computing  (13  Mar  01)  [foldoc]: 
 
  moby 
 
    /moh'bee/  (From  {MIT},  seems  to  have  been  in  use 
  among  model  railroad  fans  years  ago.  Derived  from  Melville's 
  "Moby  Dick",  some  say  from  "Moby  Pickle")  1.  Large  immense, 
  complex,  impressive.  "A  Saturn  V  rocket  is  a  truly  moby 
  frob."  "Some  MIT  undergrads  pulled  off  a  moby  hack  at  the 
  Harvard-Yale  game." 
 
  2.  (Obsolete)  The  maximum  {address  space}  of  a  computer  (see 
  below).  For  a  680[234]0  or  {VAX}  or  most  modern  32-bit 
  architectures,  it  is  4,294,967,296  8-bit  bytes  (four 
  {gigabytes}). 
 
  3.  A  title  of  address  (never  of  third-person  reference), 
  usually  used  to  show  admiration,  respect,  and/or  friendliness 
  to  a  competent  hacker.  "Greetings,  moby  Dave.  How's  that 
  address-book  thing  for  the  Mac  going?" 
 
  4.  In  backgammon,  doubles  on  the  dice,  as  in  "moby  sixes", 
  "moby  ones",  etc  Compare  this  with  {bignum}:  double  sixes 
  are  both  bignums  and  moby  sixes,  but  moby  ones  are  not  bignums 
  (the  use  of  moby"  to  describe  double  ones  is  sarcastic). 
 
  5.  The  largest  available  unit  of  something  which  is  available 
  in  discrete  increments.  Thus  a  "moby  Coke"  is  not  just  large 
  it's  the  largest  size  on  sale. 
 
  This  term  entered  hackerdom  with  the  Fabritek  256K  memory 
  added  to  the  MIT  AI  PDP-6  machine,  which  was  considered 
  unimaginably  huge  when  it  was  installed  in  the  1960s  (at  a 
  time  when  a  more  typical  memory  size  for  a  {time-sharing} 
  system  was  72  kilobytes).  Thus  a  moby  is  classically  256K 
  36-bit  words  the  size  of  a  PDP-6  or  PDP-10  moby.  Back  when 
  {address  registers}  were  narrow  the  term  was  more  generally 
  useful,  because  when  a  computer  had  {virtual  memory}  mapping, 
  it  might  actually  have  more  physical  memory  attached  to  it 
  than  any  one  program  could  access  directly.  One  could  then 
  say  "This  computer  has  six  mobies"  meaning  that  the  ratio  of 
  physical  memory  to  address  space  is  six  without  having  to  say 
  specifically  how  much  memory  there  actually  is  That  in  turn 
  implied  that  the  computer  could  timeshare  six  "full-sized" 
  programs  without  having  to  swap  programs  between  memory  and 
  disk. 
 
  Nowadays  the  low  cost  of  processor  logic  means  that  address 
  spaces  are  usually  larger  than  the  most  physical  memory  you 
  can  cram  onto  a  machine,  so  most  systems  have  much  *less*  than 
  one  theoretical  native"  moby  of  {core}.  Also  more  modern 
  memory-management  techniques  (especially  paging)  make  the 
  "moby  count"  less  significant.  However,  there  is  one  series 
  of  widely-used  chips  for  which  the  term  could  stand  to  be 
  revived  ---  the  Intel  8088  and  80286  with  their  incredibly 
  {brain-damaged}  segmented-memory  designs.  On  these  a  moby" 
  would  be  the  1-megabyte  address  span  of  a  segment/offset  pair 
  (by  coincidence,  a  PDP-10  moby  was  exactly  one  megabyte  of 
  nine-bit  bytes). 
 
  [{Jargon  File}] 
 
  (1997-10-01)