DocumentCode
890075
Title
Experience with some early computers
Author
Churchhouse, R.F.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Math., Univ. of Wales Coll. of Cardiff, UK
Volume
4
Issue
2
fYear
1993
fDate
4/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
63
Lastpage
67
Abstract
In the early l950s, computers filled lace rooms, consumed enormous quantities of power, broke down regularly and came without any software at all. Programming was initially in absolute machine code, memory was extremely limited and I/O was rudimentary. Virtually every program presented some novel, intellectual challenge. The author´s own programming experience began on the Manchester Mark 1 machine and continued via the IBM 704 to the Univac 1103A, by which time (1958) Fortran and the operating systems had arrived, machines were much smaller, were far more reliable and had `enormous´ memories of up to 32K words. The characteristics of these early machines and the joys and pains of programming them are described
Keywords
computers; history; programming; Fortran; I/O; IBM 704; Manchester Mark 1 machine; Univac 1103A; absolute machine code; early computers; operating systems; programming; programming experience;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computing & Control Engineering Journal
Publisher
iet
ISSN
0956-3385
Type
jour
Filename
211564
Link To Document