A hybrid first-second generation machine:
First Generation - nearly 200 transistors and 1000 diodes provide first generation discrete logic
Second Generation - Hitachi SSI MOS ICs
Two Philco MSI MOS ICs contain most of the BCD adder. These chips were probably at the cutting edge of technology at that time.
Working from the similarity to the AL-1000, the architecture is likely to be similar:
14 displayed digits, 1 sign digit and one decimal position digit = 16 digit word
Digits encoded as 4-bit BCD, digit-serial processing over 4-bit internal bus
Core memory, 8 registers x 16 digits x 4 bits = 512 cores
@@kHz master clock, @@mS core cycle, @@mS full-number time
Five double-sided boards plug into a hand-wired backplane.
The AL-2000 appears to be an improvement of the AL-1000 with integrated circuits allowing the AL-2000 to be smaller but still correcting many of the AL-1000's deficiencies. Programming remains a weakness and still consists of a single linear execution of stored keycodes with no conditional branching or looping.