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Synchronous transmit-receive

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Synchronous transmit-receive (STR) was an early IBM communications protocol which preceded Bisync. STR was point-to-point only, and employed a four-of-eight transmission code, communicating at up to 5100 characters per second over half-duplex or full-duplex communication lines.

The IBM 1130 Synchronous Communications Adapter, the IBM System/360 model 20 Communications Adapter, and the IBM 2701 Data Transmission Unit provided host computer support for STR.

The IBM 1009 Data Transmission Unit, the IBM 7701, the IBM 7702 Magnetic Tape Transmission Terminal, the IBM 1013 Card Transmission Terminal, and the IBM 7710 and IBM 7711 Data Communication Units were among the remote devices supported by STR.[1]

STR was still supported as of 1972,[1] although it had generally faded from use.

Four-of-eight code

The four-of-eight code was a 64 character set plus seven control characters, encoded in eight bits. Exactly four bits of each character were one bits.

References

  1. ^ a b IBM Corporation (1972). IBM 1130 Functional Characteristics (PDF). pp. 171–172.