Archive for January 1970
Computer History 1968
By : Sachin Kumar SahuIn the photograph, Ed deCastro, president and founder of Data General, sits with a Nova minicomputer. The simple architecture of the Nova instruction set inspired Steve Wozniak´s Apple I board eight years later.
The Apollo Guidance Computer made its debut orbiting the Earth on Apollo 7. A year later, it steered Apollo 11 to the lunar surface. Astronauts communicated with the computer by punching two-digit codes and the appropriate syntactic category into the display and keyboard unit.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1966
By : Sachin Kumar SahuThis photograph shows one of the ILLIAC´s 13 Burroughs disks, the debugging computer, the central unit, and the processing unit cabinet with a processing element.
Hewlett-Packard entered the general purpose computer business with its HP-2115 for computation, offering a computational power formerly found only in much larger computers. It supported a wide variety of languages, among them BASIC, ALGOL, and FORTRAN.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Computer History 1965
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1964
By : Sachin Kumar SahuCDC´s 6600 supercomputer, designed by Seymour Cray, performed up to 3 million instructions per second — a processing speed three times faster than that of its closest competitor, the IBM Stretch. The 6600 retained the distinction of being the fastest computer in the world until surpassed by its successor, the CDC 7600, in 1968. Part of the speed came from the computer´s design, which had 10 small computers, known as peripheral processors, funneling data to a large central processing unit.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Computer History 1962
By : Sachin Kumar SahuResearch faculty came to a workshop at MIT to build their own machines, most of which they used in biomedical studies. DEC supplied components.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
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Computer History,
Computer History 1960
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1961
By : Sachin Kumar SahuDemand called for more than 12,000 of the 1401 computers, and the machine´s success made a strong case for using general-purpose computers rather than specialized systems.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1959
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1956
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
MIT,
Computer History 1958
By : Sachin Kumar SahuThe air defense system operated on the AN/FSQ-7 computer (known as Whirlwind II during its development at MIT) as its central computer. Each computer used a full megawatt of power to drive its 55,000 vacuum tubes, 175,000 diodes and 13,000 transistors.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1954
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1953
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1952
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1951
By : Sachin Kumar SahuStart of project: 1945
Completed:1951
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1950
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1949
By : Sachin Kumar SahuFor programming the EDSAC, Wilkes established a library of short programs called subroutines stored on punched paper tapes.
The Manchester Mark I computer functioned as a complete system using the Williams tube for memory. This University machine became the prototype for Ferranti Corp.´s first computer.
Start of project: 1947
Completed: 1949
Add time: 1.8 microseconds
Input/output: paper tape, teleprinter, switches
Memory size:128 + 1024 40-digit words
Memory type: cathode ray tube, magnetic drum
Technology : 1,300 vacuum tubes
Floor space: medium room
Project leaders: Frederick Williams and Tom Kilburn
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1948
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSpeed - 50 multiplications per second
Input/output: cards, punched tape
Memory type: punched tape, vacuum tubes, relays
Technology: 20,000 relays, 12,500 vacuum tubes
Floor space: 25 feet by 40 feet
Project leader: Wallace Eckert
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1946
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1944
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
IBM,
Computer History 1945
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1942
By : Sachin Kumar SahuThe legal result was a landmark: Atanasoff was declared the originator of several basic computer ideas, but the computer as a concept was declared un-patentable and thus was freely open to all. This result has been referred to as the "dis-invention of the computer." A full-scale reconstruction of the ABC was completed in 1997 and proved that the ABC machine functioned as Atanasoff had claimed.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1943
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
MIT,
Computer History 1941
By : Sachin Kumar SahuKonrad Zuse finishes the Z3 computer. The Z3 was an early computer built by German engineer Konrad Zuse working in complete isolation from developments elsewhere. Using 2,300 relays, the Z3 used floating point binary arithmetic and had a 22-bit word length. The original Z3 was destroyed in a bombing raid of Berlin in late 1943. However, Zuse later supervised a reconstruction of the Z3 in the 1960s which is currently on display at the Deutsches Museum in Munich.
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1940
By : Sachin Kumar SahuSource: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
Computer History 1939
By : Sachin Kumar SahuHewlett-Packard is Founded. David Packard and Bill Hewlett found Hewlett-Packard in a Palo Alto, California garage. Their first product was the HP 200A Audio Oscillator, which rapidly becomes a popular piece of test equipment for engineers. Walt Disney Pictures ordered eight of the 200B model to use as sound effects generators for the 1940 movie “Fantasia.”
(Fig - David Packard and Bill Hewlett in their Palo Alto, California Garage)
Source: - www.computerhistory.org
Tag :
Computer History,
1939
By : Sachin Kumar SahuHewlett-Packard is Founded. David Packard and Bill Hewlett found Hewlett-Packard in a Palo Alto, California garage. Their first product was the HP 200A Audio Oscillator, which rapidly becomes a popular piece of test equipment for engineers. Walt Disney Pictures ordered eight of the 200B model to use as sound effects generators for the 1940 movie “Fantasia.”
David Packard and Bill Hewlett in their Palo Alto, California Garage