• DocumentCode
    1192935
  • Title

    Development of the digital computer - II

  • Author

    Miller, Edmund K.

  • Volume
    22
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2003
  • Firstpage
    41
  • Lastpage
    44
  • Abstract
    The first truly electronic computers, ones that used vacuum tubes rather than electromechanical relays for switching, originated in connection with World War II (WWII). Computation became a major thrust in that war for two complex problems that could only benefit from faster computational machinery. One was the problem among the various combatants to be able to read the other side\´s radio messages. This goal required a capability for "code cracking." The radio traffic could be easily intercepted, but the contents were often protected by complicated encryption schemes. The other computation problem is more-mundane sounding, but was none-the-less an important one, i.e. developing trajectory tables for guns and, later, for missiles. Each new gun type required its own tables to tell the gunner at what angle the barrel should be elevated to hit a distant target.
  • Keywords
    cryptography; digital computers; military communication; military computing; missiles; radiocommunication; World War II; code cracking; computational machinery; electronic computers; encryption; gun barrel elevation angle; guns; missiles; radio messages; radio traffic; trajectory tables; Application software; Capacitors; Circuits; Cooling; Costs; Delay lines; Electron tubes; Military computing; Ventilation; Weapons;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Potentials, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-6648
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MP.2003.1197882
  • Filename
    1197882