Charles H. Moore

Last updated

Chuck Moore
ChuckMoore.jpg
Moore c.2006 or earlier
Born
Charles Havice Moore II

(1938-09-09) 9 September 1938 (age 85) [1]
NationalityAmerican
OccupationComputer chip designer
Known for Forth programming language
Stack machine processors
SpouseWinifred Bellis (m. 1967–2005, her death) [2]
ChildrenEric O. Moore [3]
Website colorforth.github.io

Charles Havice Moore II [1] (born 9 September 1938), better known as Chuck Moore, is an American computer engineer and programmer, best known for inventing the Forth programming language in 1968. He cofounded FORTH, Inc., with Elizabeth Rather in 1971 and continued to evolve the language with an emphasis on simplicity.

Contents

Beginning in the early 1980s, Moore shifted focus to designing stack machines in hardware conjoined with Forth-like languages to run on them. He developed the Novix NC4000 and ShBoom (which envolved into the Ignite processor), then the minimal instruction set MuP21, and i21. He distanced himself from Forth proper, which by then had an official standard, and built ever more minimalist stack languages to support his own needs, particularly processor design. In the early 1990s, he implemented a system called OK for direct editing of x86 machine code without a compiler or assembler. He changed direction with colorForth, which uses internal tokens in the source code to guide a tiny compiler. He chose to visualize these tokens as different colors in a program, so code to be compiled and code to be interpreted are displayed distinctly.

In the 2000s he created a series of low-power chips, marketed by GreenArrays, containing up to 144 individual stack processors.

Early career

Moore began programming at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory by the late 1950s. He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and received a bachelors in physics in 1961. He entered Stanford University for graduate school to study mathematics but in 1965 he left to move to New York City to become a freelance programmer. [4]

Forth

In 1968, while employed at the United States National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), Moore invented the initial version of the Forth language to help control radio telescopes. In 1971 he co-founded (with Elizabeth Rather) FORTH, Inc., the first, and still one of the leading, purveyors of Forth solutions. During the 1970s he ported Forth to dozens of computer architectures. [4]

Hardware design

In the 1980s, Moore turned his attention and Forth development techniques to CPU design, developing several stack machine microprocessors and gaining several microprocessor-related patents [5] along the way. His designs have all emphasized high performance at low power usage. He also explored alternate Forth architectures such as cmForth and machine Forth, which more closely matched his chips' machine languages.

In 1983 Moore founded Novix, Inc., where he developed the NC4000 processor. This design was licensed to Harris Semiconductor which marketed an enhanced version as the RTX2000, a radiation hardened stack processor which has been used in numerous NASA missions. In 1985 at his consulting firm Computer Cowboys, he developed the Sh-Boom processor. Starting in 1990, he developed his own VLSI CAD system, OKAD, to overcome limitations in existing CAD software. He used these tools to develop several multi-core minimal instruction set computer (MISC) chips: the MuP21 in 1990 and the F21 in 1993.

Moore was a founder of iTv Corp, [6] [7] one of the first companies to work on internet appliances. In 1996 he designed another custom chip for this system, the i21. [8] [9]

Moore developed the colorForth dialect of Forth, a language derived from the scripting language for his custom VLSI CAD system, OKAD. In 2001, he rewrote OKAD in colorForth and designed the c18 processor.

In 2005, Moore co-founded and became Chief Technology Officer of IntellaSys, which develops and markets his chip designs, such as the seaForth-24 multi-core processor.

In 2009, he co-founded and became CTO of GreenArrays, Inc which is marketing the GA4 and GA144 multi-computer chips.

Publications

Related Research Articles

Processor design is a subfield of computer science and computer engineering (fabrication) that deals with creating a processor, a key component of computer hardware.

Forth is a stack-oriented programming language and interactive integrated development environment designed by Charles H. "Chuck" Moore and first used by other programmers in 1970. Although not an acronym, the language's name in its early years was often spelled in all capital letters as FORTH. The FORTH-79 and FORTH-83 implementations, which were not written by Moore, became de facto standards, and an official technical standard of the language was published in 1994 as ANS Forth. A wide range of Forth derivatives existed before and after ANS Forth. The free and open-source software Gforth implementation is actively maintained, as are several commercially supported systems.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Intel 8080</span> 8-bit microprocessor

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Integrated circuit</span> Electronic circuit formed on a small, flat piece of semiconductor material

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">MOS Technology 6502</span> 8-bit microprocessor from 1975

The MOS Technology 6502 is an 8-bit microprocessor that was designed by a small team led by Chuck Peddle for MOS Technology. The design team had formerly worked at Motorola on the Motorola 6800 project; the 6502 is essentially a simplified, less expensive and faster version of that design.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Motorola 6809</span> 8-bit microprocessor

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">VAX</span> Line of computers sold by Digital Equipment Corporation

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Very-large-scale integration</span> Creating an integrated circuit by combining many transistors into a single chip

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Application-specific integrated circuit</span> Integrated circuit customized for a specific task

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Electronic design automation (EDA), also referred to as electronic computer-aided design (ECAD), is a category of software tools for designing electronic systems such as integrated circuits and printed circuit boards. The tools work together in a design flow that chip designers use to design and analyze entire semiconductor chips. Since a modern semiconductor chip can have billions of components, EDA tools are essential for their design; this article in particular describes EDA specifically with respect to integrated circuits (ICs).

colorForth is a programming language from the Forth language's creator, Charles H. Moore, developed in the 1990s. The language combines elements of Moore's earlier Forth systems and adds color as a way of indicating how words should be interpreted. Program text is tokenized as it is edited; the compiler operates on the tokenized form, so there is less work at compile time.

In computer science, computer engineering and programming language implementations, a stack machine is a computer processor or a virtual machine in which the primary interaction is moving short-lived temporary values to and from a push down stack. In the case of a hardware processor, a hardware stack is used. The use of a stack significantly reduces the required number of processor registers. Stack machines extend push-down automata with additional load/store operations or multiple stacks and hence are Turing-complete.

The AT&T Hobbit is a microprocessor design developed by AT&T Corporation in the early 1990s. It was based on the company's CRISP design resembling the classic RISC pipeline, and which in turn grew out of the C Machine design by Bell Labs of the late 1980s. All were optimized for running code compiled from the C programming language. The design concentrates on fast instruction decoding, indexed array access, and procedure calls.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of general-purpose CPUs</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ignite (microprocessor)</span>

Ignite is a two stack, stack machine reduced instruction set computer (RISC) microprocessor architecture. The architecture was originally developed by Russell H. Fish III and Chuck H. Moore, Nanotronics, which was later acquired by Patriot Scientific Corporation. The processor is one of the few commercially produced microprocessors that use a stack-based computing model. Target applications for this unique architecture were mainly embedded devices and efficient implementation of virtual stack machines, such as the Java virtual machine or the stack machine underlying the Forth programming language. The product was unsuccessful in the market.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Bergin, Thomas J. and Gibson, Richard G., History of Programming Languages, Volume ., Addison Wesley, 1996, p. 670.
  2. Winifred Bellis Moore Archived 1 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine , 10 October 1932 – 11 January 2005
  3. Eric O. Moore Archived 13 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine , born 1969 in Amsterdam NY
  4. 1 2 Rather, Elizabeth; Colburn, Donald; Moore, Charles (1 January 1996). "The evolution of Forth". History of programming languages---II. pp. 625–670. doi:10.1145/234286.1057832. ISBN   9780201895025 . Retrieved 17 October 2022.{{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  5. Hewlett-Packard Licenses Moore Microprocessor Patent Portfolio, LinuxElectrons, 23 January 2006, archived from the original on 26 December 2007.
  6. "iTV Corp. Develops New Low-Cost, High-Speed Computer Chip", Business Wire, 3 June 1996.
  7. The iTV Corporation, archived from the original on 22 September 2001
  8. "i21 Processor". Archived from the original on 23 April 1999. Retrieved 24 March 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), High-performance low-cost Internet access multiprocessor, iTv Corp
  9. Mailing List: fire-side-chat, From:Jeff Fox, Sun, 17 November 1996 02:22:00 -0800, "...This box will contain iTV's i21 chip designed by Chuck Moore."