EBCDIC

( /eb´s@·dik/, /eb´see`dik/, /eb´k@·dik/, n.)

   [abbreviation,  Extended  Binary  Coded  Decimal Interchange Code] An
   alleged  character set used on IBM {dinosaur}s. It exists in at least
   six  mutually  incompatible  versions, all featuring such delights as
   non-contiguous  letter  sequences  and  the  absence of several ASCII
   punctuation characters fairly important for modern computer languages
   (exactly  which  characters  are  absent  varies  according  to which
   version  of  EBCDIC  you're  looking  at).  IBM  adapted  EBCDIC from
   {punched  card}  code  in  the  early  1960s  and promulgated it as a
   customer-control  tactic  (see  {connector conspiracy}), spurning the
   already  established  ASCII  standard.  Today,  IBM  claims  to be an
   open-systems  company,  but  IBM's  own  description  of  the  EBCDIC
   variants  and  how  to  convert  between  them  is  still  internally
   classified  top-secret,  burn-before-reading.  Hackers  blanch at the
   very name of EBCDIC and consider it a manifestation of purest {evil}.
   See also {fear and loathing}.

[glossary]
[Reference(s) to this entry by made by: {ASCII}{eat flaming death}{fear and loathing}{octal forty}{text}]