A Navy technician attends to the Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator in Cambridge, Mass., on Aug. 7, 1944. The calculator was developed by IBM. It was the largest electromechanical calculator ...
On August 7, 1944, IBM dedicated the Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (ASCC), better known as the Harvard Mark I, to Harvard University. Mark I was the largest electromechanical calculator ...
CC0 Usage Conditions ApplyClick for more information. Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual ...
Later this evening the National Inventors Hall of Fame will induct three IBM (NYSE: IBM) engineers for their invention of the Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (ASCC), which was developed more ...
THE new I.B.M. Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator at Harvard was recently described in Nature (158, 567; 1946). The volume now before us contains the first of a series of tables produced by the ...
As the Supreme Court contemplates the patent eligibility of computer systems, the National Inventors Hall of Fame will induct three IBM (NYSE: IBM) engineers for their invention of the Automatic ...
THE black mark earned by the government of the day more than a hundred years ago for its failure to see Charles Babbage's difference engine brought to a sucessful conclusion has still to be wiped out.