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@ -446,3 +446,52 @@ variety of different electronic methods for memory:
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memory. Data and memory was input via punched cards.
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memory. Data and memory was input via punched cards.
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### Further applications of the EDSAC architecture
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### Further applications of the EDSAC architecture
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### LEO I
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- Built by Lyons Tea Company to manage business affairs (payroll, inventory,
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stock management)
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- Marked a shift from military and academic contexts for computers to business
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and data management.
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### IAS machines
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Several machines were built at the Institute for Advanced Study utilising the
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"von Neumann" architecture and associated advancements such as vacuum-tubes and
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Williams' tubes. There was the original IAS machine (1952) as well as the
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JOHNNIAC (1954) and MANIAC (1956).
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Although their purpose was military (Los Alamos), their designs were public and
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widely studied making them influential outside of academia.
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### UNIVAC (1951)
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Mauchley and Eckert, who had designed the ENIAC left the Moore School and went
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into business: Eckert-Mauchley Computer Corporation. This was bought by
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Remington Rand and in subsequent years became the main competitor to IBM.
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In this capacity they built the UNIVAC: _Universal Automatic Computer_. It's
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name being an embodiment of its nature as a general-purpose, electronic digital
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computer.
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It used vacuum-tubes for logic and mercury delay lines for memory. It had
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multiple means of input/output including: directly via an operator console
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(basically a typewriter keyboard), magnetic tape for input and output, along
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with punched cards.
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It was the first computer specifically designed to include business and
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administrative use. This was underscored by its first client: the US Census
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Bureau.
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A key event was its succesful prediction of the 1952 general election. It
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correctly predicted a landslide for Eisenhower (against expectations). (This was
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so unlikely, they actually fudged the data because they thought the machine was
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way off.) It was a novelty on the results night but it cemented a certain
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concept of the computer in the public imagination - large, room sized machines
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with blinking lights.
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Swade notes that Eckert and Mauchley effectively launched the US commercial
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computer industry with the UNIVAC.
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