DocumentCode
1287034
Title
Agricultural computing and the context for John Atanasoff
Author
Grier, D.A.
Author_Institution
George Washington Univ., Washington, DC
Volume
22
Issue
1
fYear
2000
Firstpage
48
Lastpage
61
Abstract
The story of John Atanasoff occupies an unsettled spot in the literature of computing. The material about him ranges from curt dismissals to hagiography. While scholars are getting an ever more accurate picture of Atanasoff´s work and his contribution to computing, even the best articles tend to treat him as an aberration, a lone inventor working outside the circle of computing machine researchers. In fact, Atanasoff worked closely with the Iowa State Statistics Laboratory for three years. This laboratory was part of the computing labs that the US Department of Agriculture sponsored. The Department of Agriculture had become interested in computing shortly after World War I. Atanasoff´s computer, the Atanasoff-Berry Computer (ABC), was designed to do a time-consuming task for the Statistical Laboratory, the one task that had not been automated with IBM punched card equipment
Keywords
agriculture; biographies; computer applications; history; statistics; ABC; Atanasoff-Berry Computer; IBM punched card equipment; Iowa State Statistics Laboratory; John Atanasoff; US Department of Agriculture; agricultural computing; computing laboratory; computing machine research; dismissals; hagiography; history; lone inventor; time-consuming task automation; Cities and towns; Computer industry; Digital integrated circuits; Educational institutions; Humans; Laboratories; Military computing; Scientific computing; Statistics; US Department of Agriculture;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Annals of the History of Computing, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1058-6180
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/85.815466
Filename
815466
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