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Cocke, John

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Cocke, John (1925–2002)

US electrical engineer. His major research contributions were in systems architecture, hardware design, and program optimization. Working at International Business Machines (IBM) from 1956 onwards, he invented RISC, (reduced instruction set computing) in 1974–75, although he didn't invent the acronym. RISC technology enabled telephone-switching networks to handle 12 million instructions per second.

Cocke was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, and died in Valhalla, New York.



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