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For example:
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Endianness is initially an arbitrary decision by the semiconductor vendor that can have a long-term impact on a line of products.
When vendors update their technology, they keep the existing endianness to help maintain backward compatibility.
For example, the designers of the Motorola 68000 and the Intel 8086 (predecessor of the x86 family) chose their endianness in the 1970s and continue to use their respective endianness today.
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In fact, the term Big endian and Little endian is taken from the book Gulliver's travels and describes a meaningless squabble between 2 faction in the nation Lilliput:
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The people in Lilliput were very tiny (compared) to Gulliver and their eggs is even smaller.
Gulliver can't tell which end was the big end and which was the little end. So to Gulliver, this squabble was meaningless...
So it does not matter which store-ordering a processor uses...
See: click here
(We did not change the default.)
That's why you had to reverse the byte ordering in this webpage: click here