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The First Computers: History and Architectures

by Raúl Rojas, Ulf Hashagen (Editor)

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922294,085 (3.6)None
This history of computing focuses not on chronology (what came first and who deserves credit for it) but on the actual architectures of the first machines that made electronic computing a practical reality. The book covers computers built in the United States, Germany, England, and Japan. It makes clear that similar concepts were often pursued simultaneously and that the early researchers explored many architectures beyond the von Neumann architecture that eventually became canonical. The contributors include not only historians but also engineers and computer pioneers. An introductory chapter describes the elements of computer architecture and explains why "being first" is even less interesting for computers than for other areas of technology. The essays contain a remarkable amount of new material, even on well-known machines, and several describe reconstructions of the historic machines. These investigations are of more than simply historical interest, for architectures designed to solve specific problems in the past may suggest new approaches to similar problems in today's machines. - Publisher.… (more)
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Fascinating collection of papers from a 1999 conference on early computers, calculators, and tabulators, covering roughly 1925-1965. The depth and writing quality varies widely. The most in-depth is probably the ENIAC on a Chip paper, it might contain enough information to get working on a simulator. I also finally grokked how plug-board computing works. A few others contain full instruction sets. The piece giving a social-orgainization perspective on von Neumann's IAS machine also stood out.

All the usual suspects, ENIAC, ABC, the Manchester Baby, Z1-Z3, Z4, but also some I'd never heard of before, like the DEHOMAG machines and some early Japanese machines. The early Japanese machines were really interesting because of their use of parametrons, which I'd never heard of before, instead of tubes or transistors. ( )
1 vote encephalical | Apr 15, 2018 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Raúl Rojasprimary authorall editionscalculated
Hashagen, UlfEditormain authorall editionsconfirmed

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This history of computing focuses not on chronology (what came first and who deserves credit for it) but on the actual architectures of the first machines that made electronic computing a practical reality. The book covers computers built in the United States, Germany, England, and Japan. It makes clear that similar concepts were often pursued simultaneously and that the early researchers explored many architectures beyond the von Neumann architecture that eventually became canonical. The contributors include not only historians but also engineers and computer pioneers. An introductory chapter describes the elements of computer architecture and explains why "being first" is even less interesting for computers than for other areas of technology. The essays contain a remarkable amount of new material, even on well-known machines, and several describe reconstructions of the historic machines. These investigations are of more than simply historical interest, for architectures designed to solve specific problems in the past may suggest new approaches to similar problems in today's machines. - Publisher.

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