rwiker wrote:
Was "CX" "Commercial Extension" (aka BCD arithmetic)?
The ND-100/CE was an ND-100 with BCD arithmetic and stack handling instructions (all-in-one instructions for something compilers would use multiple instructions for, at function start and exit). So /CE was Commercial Extended. It was an upgrade of the microcode. Later there was ND-100/CX which improved on the /CE microcode implementation and also introduced new OS support instructions. ND-100/CX became the "standard", as the operating system soon started using those new instructions (the /VSX version of SINTRAN-III).
The ND-110 was a newer version of the ND-100/CX, with integrated Memory Management System on the same board, no separate MMS board needed, and
much more, including many more instructions. The ND-110/CX is just a faster version of the ND-110, with larger instruction cache and adding a data cache. 1.5 to 3.5 times faster than the 110.
TL;DR,: For the older ND-100, /CE was Commercial Extended, /CX was /CE plus OS support instructions, /CX was also a bit more modern technologically.
For the ND-110, /CX just means "faster" (the 110, without /CX, already included all the 100/CX instructions and had the same performance). Essentially, ND-110/CX was just the faster improved version 2 of the ND-110.