I was talking about the original configuration. The combination of 16 bit
word with good 8 bit support and a well implemented instruction set made
the original PDP-11 a significant computer for a wide range of applications.
I mentioned the numerical control application because it was an
application that I was familiar with. The PIC could implement small
control and data handling applications. The PDP-11 had paper tape
readers and at the time a TTY console making it flexible for many
applications the PIC's for the most part until very recently could not
easily do.
I know both processors well. I ran a lab in the 70's that eventually had
11 PDP-11's in it including 2 of the original PDP-11's. In the 90's I
wrote a C compiler that targeted code for the 12,14,16 bit Microchip
PIC cores and worked on the instruction set design for the extended
14 bit core and wrote a compiler for it 2 or 3 years ago.
Walter..