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@ -262,7 +262,7 @@ cards and the output was via a front-panel display.
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Its importance stems from the fact that it was the first to use vacuum-tubes for
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the arithmetic calculations of the processor.
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### Colossus (1943-1945) - Tommy Flowers/ Max Newman
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### Colossus (1943-1945) - Tommy Flowers/Max Newman
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Designed and built at the Post Office Research Station at Dollis Hill. Used for
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cracking the Lorenz messages of the German high command.
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@ -283,3 +283,52 @@ identify the key for the days transmissions.
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It's actual influence is also hard to gauge because of the secrecy that remained
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in place after the War. Apart from those who worked on it, its technical
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advancements were not public knowledge until the late 1970s.
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### ENIAC (1945) John Mauchly/J.P Eckert
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The _Electronic Numerical Calculator and Integrator_
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The main motivation for creating the ENIAC was military: the US Army needed
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speed and accuracy when calculating artiliary firing tables and munition
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trajectory so that shells could hit their intended targets. Accuracy depended on
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myriad factors: gun elevation, shell shape and weight, explosive charge,
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distance, wind, temperature etc. Previously this had been done by human
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computers under the aegis of the Ballistic Research Laboratory.
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It was not completed until after VE day but was used at Los Alamos after the War
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and retired in 1955.
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The BRL commissioned the Moore School of Engineering at the University of
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Pennsylvania for the construction of an automatic electronic calculator.
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It used vacuum-tubes, along with switches and realys. It used decimal rather
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than binary and had punch card input and output. It was crudely programmable and
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could be set up to work on different problems by rearranging the different
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components using switches and plugboards. But this took roughly two days.
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It's design was very influential because it was made public and not classified.
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### EDVAC (1944-49) John Mauchly/J.P Eckert/ John von Neumann
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Built at the Moore School for the BRL as a successor to ENIAC by Mauchly and
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Eckert whilst ENIAC was still operational. It arose out of #vonNeumann
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discussions with Mauchly and Eckert and was necessitated by the need to
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calculate the behaviour of the fissile materials in the atomic bomb.
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It resulted in the famous _First Draft of a Report on the Edvac_ by #vonNeumann
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which is seen as the definitive statement of the modern **digital programmable
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general-purpose computer**.
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As a result of the paper, #vonNeumann effectively got the credit for the
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invention even though it synthesised ideas from the ENIAC and the contributions
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of others to the EDVAC.
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There was lots of disputed provenance and claims of plagiarism generally.
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Antanasoff won a legal claim against Eckert and Mauchly for stealing ideas from
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the ABC to make ENIAC.
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// Add more on the hardware.
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## Machines
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