right|thumb|A PA-7150 microprocessor
right|thumb|A PA-7150 microprocessor
The PA-7100 is a microprocessor developed by Hewlett-Packard (HP) that implemented the PA-RISC 1.1 instruction set architecture (ISA). It is also known as the PCX-T and by its code name Thunderbird. It was introduced in early 1992 and was the first PA-RISC microprocessor to integrate the floating-point unit (FPU) on-die. It operated at and competed primarily with the Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) Alpha 21064 in the workstation and server markets. PA-7100 users were HP in its HP 9000 workstations and Stratus Computer in its Continuum fault-tolerant servers. Samsung also introduced workstations running HP-UX based on the PA-7100 and system technology licensed from HP.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).