Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/03/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Another fascinating snippet from the history of computing--thanks! Cheers, Nathan Nathan Wajsman Alicante, Spain http://www.frozenlight.eu http://www.greatpix.eu PICTURE OF THE WEEK: http://www.fotocycle.dk/paws Blog: http://nathansmusings.wordpress.com/ YNWA On Mar 10, 2013, at 11:09 PM, Herbert Kanner wrote: > This is probably the last in my series of articles about things in the > Computer History Museum. > > During World War II, the army was in a stew about the slow production of > ballistics tables for new artillery weapons. The tables were hand > calculated by women who had math degrees. John Mauchly and Presper Eckert > at the Moore School of Engineering of the University of Pennsylvania > invented a computer named ENIAC for producing these tables. It was a fully > programmable computer, could calculate anything. Eckert and Mauchly > patented it--this in itself is surprising, since it was supported by > government money. > > Eckert and Mauchly went on after the war to found the corporation which > sold a computer called UNIVAC. Ultimately, other companies went into the > computer business and a lawsuit occurred in 1967 between the UNIVAC > company and Honeywell, which refused to pay UNIVAC a license fee. A U.S. > District Court decided that the UNIVAC patent was invalid because of > never-patented but publicly disclosed prior art: a computer built by Iowa > State College physics professor John Vincent Atanasoff and graduate > student John Berry. It was built in the period 1939-1942. For short, it > became known as the "ABC Computer". UNIVAC never appealed the decision. > > Now here is what the ABC computer was designed to do. It would solve up to > 29 simultaneous linear equations in 29 variables. It would be fed two > equations and would eliminate one variable. This process would be > (manually) repeated using one of these shortened equations to shorten the > next equation. By repeating this process over and over again, the > equations would ultimately be solved. Sounds a pain, but far better than > trying to solve them by hand. That is all that the machine could do; > nothing else. > > Furthermore, if one wants to nit pick, the ABC Computer converted the > numbers to binary and worked with binary arithmetic, whereas the ENIAC > worked directly in decimal. > > I suspect that courts are more sophisticated today and would have made a > different decision. > > The original computer was too wide to be moved out of a standard door, and > ultimately various others at Iowa State liberated its parts. Eventually, > it got rebuilt with a slightly smaller case, and is now on loan to the > Computer History Museum. > > http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/herbk1/L1002926.jpg.html > > > > > Herbert Kanner > kanner at acm.org > 650-326-8204 > > Question authority and the authorities will question you. > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >