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    HAL Computer Systems was a Campbell, CA-based computer manufacturer. It was started in 1990 by Andrew Heller, a principal designer of the original IBM POWER architecture. His idea was to build computers based on a RISC architecture for
    the commercial market. When Fujitsu choose to fund the company, the SPARC architecture
    was chosen. Since the designers believed that a 64 bit architecture was necessary for the
    commercial workloads, HAL took the initiative in the definition of Version 9 of that architecture.

    By the end of 1993, Heller was pushed out of the company and HAL had become a fully owned
    subsidiary of Fujitsu.

    The company produced multiple generations of computers based on their proprietary Sparc microprocessors.
    Their microprocessors combined Out-of-order execution with mainframe-style Reliability, Availability and Serviceability features.
    Their SPARC64-I processor beat out Sun's UltraSPARC-I by a few months to be the first 64-bit Sparc
    microprocessor to be produced.

    Most of the sales of the company went to the Japanese market.
    Fujitsu closed the subsidiary in 2001.





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