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- Computer History 1950
Engineering
Research Associates of Minneapolis built the ERA 1101, the first
commercially produced computer; the company´s first customer was the
U.S. Navy. It held 1 million bits on its magnetic drum, the earliest
magnetic storage devices. Drums registered information as magnetic
pulses in tracks around a metal cylinder. Read/write heads both
recorded and recovered the data. Drums eventually stored as many as
4,000 words and retrieved any one of them in as little as
five-thousandths of a second.
The National Bureau of Standards
constructed the SEAC (Standards Eastern Automatic Computer) in
Washington as a laboratory for testing components and systems for
setting computer standards. The SEAC was the first computer to use
all-diode logic, a technology more reliable than vacuum tubes, and the
first stored-program computer completed in the United States. Magnetic
tape in the external storage units (shown on the right of this photo)
stored programming information, coded subroutines, numerical data, and
output.
The National Bureau of Standards
completed its SWAC (Standards Western Automatic Computer) at the
Institute for Numerical Analysis in Los Angeles. Rather than testing
components like its companion, the SEAC, the SWAC had an objective of
computing using already-developed technology.
Alan Turing´s philosophy directed design of Britain´s Pilot ACE at the National Physical Laboratory. "We
are trying to build a machine to do all kinds of different things
simply by programming rather than by the addition of extra apparatus," Turing said at a symposium on large-scale digital calculating machinery in 1947 in Cambridge, Mass.