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Harvard Mark I

The Harvard Mark I, or IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (ASCC), was a general-purpose electromechanical computer used in the war effort during the last part of World War II.

Harvard Mark I
Closeup of input/output and control readers
Also known asIBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (ASCC)
DeveloperHoward Aiken / IBM
Release dateAugust 7, 1944; 78 years ago (1944-08-07)
Power5 horsepower (3.7 kW)
Dimensions816 cubic feet (23 m3) – 51 feet (16 m) in length, 8 feet (2.4 m) in height, and 2 feet (0.61 m) deep
Mass9,445 pounds (4.7 short tons; 4.3 t)
SuccessorHarvard Mark II
The left end consisted of electromechanical computing components
The right end included data and program readers, and automatic typewriters

One of the first programs to run on the Mark I was initiated on 29 March 1944[1] by John von Neumann. At that time, von Neumann was working on the Manhattan Project, and needed to determine whether implosion was a viable choice to detonate the atomic bomb that would be used a year later. The Mark I also computed and printed mathematical tables, which had been the initial goal of British inventor Charles Babbage for his "analytical engine" in 1837.

The Mark I was disassembled in 1959, but portions of it were displayed in the Science Center as part of the Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments until being moved to the new Science and Engineering Complex in Allston, Massachusetts in July 2021.[2] Other sections of the original machine had much earlier been transferred to IBM and the Smithsonian Institution.

Origins

The original concept was presented to IBM by Howard Aiken in November 1937.[3] After a feasibility study by IBM engineers, the company chairman Thomas Watson Sr. personally approved the project and its funding in February 1939.

Howard Aiken had started to look for a company to design and build his calculator in early 1937. After two rejections,[4] he was shown a demonstration set that Charles Babbage’s son had given to Harvard University 70 years earlier. This led him to study Babbage and to add references of the Analytical Engine to his proposal; the resulting machine "brought Babbage’s principles of the Analytical Engine almost to full realization, while adding important new features."[5]

The ASCC was developed and built by IBM at their Endicott plant and shipped to Harvard in February 1944. It began computations for the U.S. Navy Bureau of Ships in May and was officially presented to the university on August 7, 1944.[6]

Design and construction

The ASCC was built from switches, relays, rotating shafts, and clutches. It used 765,000 electromechanical components and hundreds of miles of wire, comprising a volume of 816 cubic feet (23 m3) – 51 feet (16 m) in length, 8 feet (2.4 m) in height, and 2 feet (0.61 m) deep. It weighed about 9,445 pounds (4.7 short tons; 4.3 t).[7] The basic calculating units had to be synchronized and powered mechanically, so they were operated by a 50-foot (15 m) drive shaft coupled to a 5 horsepower (3.7 kW) electric motor, which served as the main power source and system clock. From the IBM Archives:

The Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (Harvard Mark I) was the first operating machine that could execute long computations automatically. A project conceived by Harvard University’s Dr. Howard Aiken, the Mark I was built by IBM engineers in Endicott, N.Y. A steel frame 51 feet long and 8 feet high held the calculator, which consisted of an interlocking panel of small gears, counters, switches and control circuits, all only a few inches in depth. The ASCC used 500 miles (800 km) of wire with three million connections, 3,500 multipole relays with 35,000 contacts, 2,225 counters, 1,464 tenpole switches and tiers of 72 adding machines, each with 23 significant numbers. It was the industry’s largest electromechanical calculator.[8]

The enclosure for the Mark I was designed by futuristic American industrial designer Norman Bel Geddes at IBM's expense. Aiken was annoyed that the cost ($50,000 or more according to Grace Hopper) was not used to build additional computer equipment.[9]

Operation

The Mark I had 60 sets of 24 switches for manual data entry and could store 72 numbers, each 23 decimal digits long.[10] It could do 3 additions or subtractions in a second. A multiplication took 6 seconds, a division took 15.3 seconds, and a logarithm or a trigonometric function took over one minute.[11]

The Mark I read its instructions from a 24-channel punched paper tape. It executed the current instruction and then read in the next one. A separate tape could contain numbers for input, but the tape formats were not interchangeable. Instructions could not be executed from the storage registers. This separation of data and instructions is known as the Harvard architecture (although the exact nature of this separation that makes a machine Harvard, rather than Von Neumann, has been obscured with the passage of time; see Modified Harvard architecture).[citation needed]

The main sequence mechanism was unidirectional. This meant that complex programs had to be physically lengthy. A program loop was accomplished by loop unrolling or by joining the end of the paper tape containing the program back to the beginning of the tape (literally creating a loop). At first, conditional branching in the Mark I was performed manually. Later modifications in 1946 introduced automatic program branching (by subroutine call).[12][13] The first programmers of the Mark I were computing pioneers Richard Milton Bloch, Robert Campbell, and Grace Hopper.[14] There was also a small technical team whose assignment was to actually operate the machine; some had been IBM employees before being required to join the Navy to work on the machine.[15] This technical team was not informed of the overall purpose of their work while at Harvard.

Instruction format

The 24 channels of the input tape were divided into three fields of eight channels. Each storage location, each set of switches, and the registers associated with the input, output, and arithmetic units were assigned a unique identifying index number. These numbers were represented in binary on the control tape. The first field was the binary index of the result of the operation, the second was the source datum for the operation and the third field was a code for the operation to be performed.[10]

Contribution to the Manhattan Project

In 1928 L.J. Comrie was the first to turn IBM "punched-card equipment to scientific use: computation of astronomical tables by the method of finite differences, as envisioned by Babbage 100 years earlier for his Difference Engine".[16] Very soon after, IBM started to modify its tabulators to facilitate this kind of computation. One of these tabulators, built in 1931, was The Columbia Difference Tabulator.[17]

John von Neumann had a team at Los Alamos that used "modified IBM punched-card machines"[18] to determine the effects of implosion. In March 1944, he proposed to run certain problems regarding implosion on the Mark I, and in 1944 he arrived with two mathematicians to write a simulation program to study the implosion of the first atomic bomb.[19]

The Los Alamos group completed its work in a much shorter time than the Cambridge group. However, the punched-card machine operation computed values to six decimal places, whereas the Mark I computed values to eighteen decimal places. Additionally, Mark I integrated the partial differential equation at a much smaller interval size [or smaller mesh] and so...achieved far greater precision.[18]

"Von Neumann joined the Manhattan Project in 1943, working on the immense number of calculations needed to build the atomic bomb. He showed that the implosion design, which would later be used in the Trinity and Fat Man bombs, was likely faster and more efficient than the gun design."[20]

Aiken and IBM

Aiken published a press release announcing the Mark I listing himself as the sole “inventor”. James W. Bryce was the only IBM person mentioned, even though several IBM engineers including Clair Lake and Frank Hamilton had helped to build various elements. IBM chairman Thomas J. Watson was enraged, and only reluctantly attended the dedication ceremony on August 7, 1944.[21][page needed][22] Aiken, in turn, decided to build further machines without IBM’s help, and the ASCC came to be generally known as the "Harvard Mark I". IBM went on to build its Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator (SSEC) to both test new technology and provide more publicity for the company's own efforts.[21][page needed]

Successors

The Mark I was followed by the Harvard Mark II (1947 or 1948), Mark III/ADEC (September 1949), and Harvard Mark IV (1952) – all the work of Aiken. The Mark II was an improvement over the Mark I, although it still was based on electromechanical relays. The Mark III used mostly electronic componentsvacuum tubes and crystal diodes—but also included mechanical components: rotating magnetic drums for storage, plus relays for transferring data between drums. The Mark IV was all-electronic, replacing the remaining mechanical components with magnetic core memory. The Mark II and Mark III were delivered to the US Navy base at Dahlgren, Virginia. The Mark IV was built for the US Air Force, but it stayed at Harvard.[citation needed]

The Mark I was disassembled in 1959, and portions of it went on display in the Science Center, as part of the Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments. It was relocated to the new Science and Engineering Complex in Allston in July 2021.[23] Other sections of the original machine had much earlier been transferred to IBM and to the Smithsonian Institution.[24]

See also

References

Notes
  1. ^ Bernard Cohen, p.164 (2000)
  2. ^ "Mark 1, rebooted". Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  3. ^ Bernard Cohen, p. 53 (2000)
  4. ^ Bernard Cohen, p.39 (2000) It was first rejected by the Monroe Calculator Company and then by Harvard University.
  5. ^ "IBM's ASCC introduction 2". January 23, 2003. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  6. ^ "Proposed automatic calculating machine (Abstract)". IEEE Spectrum. IEEE Xplore. 1 (8): 62–69. August 1964. doi:10.1109/MSPEC.1964.6500770. ISSN 0018-9235. S2CID 51652725.
  7. ^ "IBM Archives: Feeds, speeds and specifications ASCC Statistics". www-03.ibm.com. January 23, 2003.
  8. ^ IBM Archives: FAQ / Products and Services
  9. ^ Computer Oral History Collection, 1969-1973, 1977 Grace Murray Hopper Interview, January 7, 1969, Archives Center, National Museum of American History (PDF). pp. 7–8. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 23, 2012. Retrieved October 21, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ a b Maurice Vincent Wilkes (1956). Automatic Digital Computers. New York: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 16–20.
  11. ^ Campbell 1999, p. 43.
  12. ^ Beyer, Kurt W. (2015). Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age. BookBaby. pp. 78–79. ISBN 9781483550497.
    • Bloch, Richard (February 22, 1984). "Oral history interview with Richard M. Bloch": 9–10. hdl:11299/107123. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
    • "The Erwin Tomash Library on the History of Computing: An Annotated and Illustrated Catalog". www.cbi.umn.edu. CBI Hosted Publications. 1948. Image: Harvard.Vol 16.1948.subsiderary sequence mechanism, description: H Chapter, pp. 577-578. Retrieved May 8, 2018.
    • ASCC operational manual, subsidiary sequence control, pp. 22, 50, 57, 73, 91
  13. ^ Campbell 1999, p. 53.
  14. ^ Wexelblat, Richard L. (Ed.) (1981). History of Programming Languages, p. 20. New York: Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-745040-8
  15. ^ Williams, Kathleen (November 10, 2012). Grace Hopper: Admiral of the Cyber Sea. Naval Institute Press. pp. 33–34. ISBN 9781612512655. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  16. ^ "Columbia University Computing History: L.J. Comrie". Retrieved December 15, 2013.
  17. ^ "The Columbia Difference Tabulator - 1931". Retrieved December 15, 2013.
  18. ^ a b #AIKEN p.166 (2000)
  19. ^ Bernard Cohen, p. 164 (2000)
  20. ^ "Atomic Heritage Foundation: John von Neumann". Retrieved May 12, 2019.
  21. ^ a b Emerson W. Pugh (1995). Building IBM: Shaping an Industry and Its Technology. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-16147-3.
  22. ^ Martin Campbell-Kelly; William Aspray (1996). Computer: A History of the Information Machine. Basic Books. p. 74. ISBN 0-465-02989-2.
  23. ^ "Mark 1, rebooted". Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  24. ^ "Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Mark I". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved May 24, 2016.
Publications

External links

  • Cruz, Frank da (August 2004). "The IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator". Columbia University Computing History. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
  • Oral history interview with Robert Hawkins at Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Hawkins discusses the Harvard-IBM Mark I project that he worked on at Harvard University as a technician as well as Howard Aiken’s leadership of the project.
  • Oral history interview with Richard M. Bloch at Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Bloch describes his work at the Harvard Computation Laboratory for Howard Aiken on the Mark I.
  • Oral history interview with Robert V. D. Campbell at Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Campbell discusses the contributions of Harvard and IBM to the Mark I project.
  • IBM Archive: IBM ASCC Reference Room
  • [1], book excerpt web page, with illustrations, by Herb Grosch, from Grosch, Herbert R.J. (1991). Computer: Bit Slices From a Life. Third Millennium Books. ISBN 0-88733-085-1. (Third edition online in 2003)
  • [2] Popular Science, October 1944, Page 86.
  • ASCC operational manual (PDF)
  • Photo with parts of the machine identified: "IBM ASCC-Mark I computer framed photograph | Objects | The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments". waywiser.rc.fas.harvard.edu.

harvard, mark, automatic, sequence, controlled, calculator, ascc, general, purpose, electromechanical, computer, used, effort, during, last, part, world, closeup, input, output, control, readersalso, known, asibm, automatic, sequence, controlled, calculator, a. The Harvard Mark I or IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator ASCC was a general purpose electromechanical computer used in the war effort during the last part of World War II Harvard Mark ICloseup of input output and control readersAlso known asIBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator ASCC DeveloperHoward Aiken IBMRelease dateAugust 7 1944 78 years ago 1944 08 07 Power5 horsepower 3 7 kW Dimensions816 cubic feet 23 m3 51 feet 16 m in length 8 feet 2 4 m in height and 2 feet 0 61 m deepMass9 445 pounds 4 7 short tons 4 3 t SuccessorHarvard Mark IIThe left end consisted of electromechanical computing components The right end included data and program readers and automatic typewriters One of the first programs to run on the Mark I was initiated on 29 March 1944 1 by John von Neumann At that time von Neumann was working on the Manhattan Project and needed to determine whether implosion was a viable choice to detonate the atomic bomb that would be used a year later The Mark I also computed and printed mathematical tables which had been the initial goal of British inventor Charles Babbage for his analytical engine in 1837 The Mark I was disassembled in 1959 but portions of it were displayed in the Science Center as part of the Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments until being moved to the new Science and Engineering Complex in Allston Massachusetts in July 2021 2 Other sections of the original machine had much earlier been transferred to IBM and the Smithsonian Institution Contents 1 Origins 2 Design and construction 3 Operation 4 Instruction format 5 Contribution to the Manhattan Project 6 Aiken and IBM 7 Successors 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksOrigins EditThe original concept was presented to IBM by Howard Aiken in November 1937 3 After a feasibility study by IBM engineers the company chairman Thomas Watson Sr personally approved the project and its funding in February 1939 Howard Aiken had started to look for a company to design and build his calculator in early 1937 After two rejections 4 he was shown a demonstration set that Charles Babbage s son had given to Harvard University 70 years earlier This led him to study Babbage and to add references of the Analytical Engine to his proposal the resulting machine brought Babbage s principles of the Analytical Engine almost to full realization while adding important new features 5 The ASCC was developed and built by IBM at their Endicott plant and shipped to Harvard in February 1944 It began computations for the U S Navy Bureau of Ships in May and was officially presented to the university on August 7 1944 6 Design and construction EditThe ASCC was built from switches relays rotating shafts and clutches It used 765 000 electromechanical components and hundreds of miles of wire comprising a volume of 816 cubic feet 23 m3 51 feet 16 m in length 8 feet 2 4 m in height and 2 feet 0 61 m deep It weighed about 9 445 pounds 4 7 short tons 4 3 t 7 The basic calculating units had to be synchronized and powered mechanically so they were operated by a 50 foot 15 m drive shaft coupled to a 5 horsepower 3 7 kW electric motor which served as the main power source and system clock From the IBM Archives The Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator Harvard Mark I was the first operating machine that could execute long computations automatically A project conceived by Harvard University s Dr Howard Aiken the Mark I was built by IBM engineers in Endicott N Y A steel frame 51 feet long and 8 feet high held the calculator which consisted of an interlocking panel of small gears counters switches and control circuits all only a few inches in depth The ASCC used 500 miles 800 km of wire with three million connections 3 500 multipole relays with 35 000 contacts 2 225 counters 1 464 tenpole switches and tiers of 72 adding machines each with 23 significant numbers It was the industry s largest electromechanical calculator 8 The enclosure for the Mark I was designed by futuristic American industrial designer Norman Bel Geddes at IBM s expense Aiken was annoyed that the cost 50 000 or more according to Grace Hopper was not used to build additional computer equipment 9 Operation EditThe Mark I had 60 sets of 24 switches for manual data entry and could store 72 numbers each 23 decimal digits long 10 It could do 3 additions or subtractions in a second A multiplication took 6 seconds a division took 15 3 seconds and a logarithm or a trigonometric function took over one minute 11 The Mark I read its instructions from a 24 channel punched paper tape It executed the current instruction and then read in the next one A separate tape could contain numbers for input but the tape formats were not interchangeable Instructions could not be executed from the storage registers This separation of data and instructions is known as the Harvard architecture although the exact nature of this separation that makes a machine Harvard rather than Von Neumann has been obscured with the passage of time see Modified Harvard architecture citation needed The main sequence mechanism was unidirectional This meant that complex programs had to be physically lengthy A program loop was accomplished by loop unrolling or by joining the end of the paper tape containing the program back to the beginning of the tape literally creating a loop At first conditional branching in the Mark I was performed manually Later modifications in 1946 introduced automatic program branching by subroutine call 12 13 The first programmers of the Mark I were computing pioneers Richard Milton Bloch Robert Campbell and Grace Hopper 14 There was also a small technical team whose assignment was to actually operate the machine some had been IBM employees before being required to join the Navy to work on the machine 15 This technical team was not informed of the overall purpose of their work while at Harvard Tape punch used to prepare programs Program tape with visible programming patches Rotary switches used to enter program data constants Sequence indicators and switches Rear view of computing sectionInstruction format EditThe 24 channels of the input tape were divided into three fields of eight channels Each storage location each set of switches and the registers associated with the input output and arithmetic units were assigned a unique identifying index number These numbers were represented in binary on the control tape The first field was the binary index of the result of the operation the second was the source datum for the operation and the third field was a code for the operation to be performed 10 Contribution to the Manhattan Project EditIn 1928 L J Comrie was the first to turn IBM punched card equipment to scientific use computation of astronomical tables by the method of finite differences as envisioned by Babbage 100 years earlier for his Difference Engine 16 Very soon after IBM started to modify its tabulators to facilitate this kind of computation One of these tabulators built in 1931 was The Columbia Difference Tabulator 17 John von Neumann had a team at Los Alamos that used modified IBM punched card machines 18 to determine the effects of implosion In March 1944 he proposed to run certain problems regarding implosion on the Mark I and in 1944 he arrived with two mathematicians to write a simulation program to study the implosion of the first atomic bomb 19 The Los Alamos group completed its work in a much shorter time than the Cambridge group However the punched card machine operation computed values to six decimal places whereas the Mark I computed values to eighteen decimal places Additionally Mark I integrated the partial differential equation at a much smaller interval size or smaller mesh and so achieved far greater precision 18 Von Neumann joined the Manhattan Project in 1943 working on the immense number of calculations needed to build the atomic bomb He showed that the implosion design which would later be used in the Trinity and Fat Man bombs was likely faster and more efficient than the gun design 20 Aiken and IBM EditAiken published a press release announcing the Mark I listing himself as the sole inventor James W Bryce was the only IBM person mentioned even though several IBM engineers including Clair Lake and Frank Hamilton had helped to build various elements IBM chairman Thomas J Watson was enraged and only reluctantly attended the dedication ceremony on August 7 1944 21 page needed 22 Aiken in turn decided to build further machines without IBM s help and the ASCC came to be generally known as the Harvard Mark I IBM went on to build its Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator SSEC to both test new technology and provide more publicity for the company s own efforts 21 page needed Successors EditThe Mark I was followed by the Harvard Mark II 1947 or 1948 Mark III ADEC September 1949 and Harvard Mark IV 1952 all the work of Aiken The Mark II was an improvement over the Mark I although it still was based on electromechanical relays The Mark III used mostly electronic components vacuum tubes and crystal diodes but also included mechanical components rotating magnetic drums for storage plus relays for transferring data between drums The Mark IV was all electronic replacing the remaining mechanical components with magnetic core memory The Mark II and Mark III were delivered to the US Navy base at Dahlgren Virginia The Mark IV was built for the US Air Force but it stayed at Harvard citation needed The Mark I was disassembled in 1959 and portions of it went on display in the Science Center as part of the Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments It was relocated to the new Science and Engineering Complex in Allston in July 2021 23 Other sections of the original machine had much earlier been transferred to IBM and to the Smithsonian Institution 24 See also EditDifference engine a pioneering 19th century mechanical computer History of computing hardwareOther early computers Zuse Z3 Germany Atanasoff Berry Computer US Colossus UK ENIAC US EDSAC UK Manchester Mark 1 UK CSIRAC Australia MESM USSR WEIZAC Israel IBM SSEC US ARRA Netherlands DASK Denmark BESK Sweden AKAT 1 Poland References EditNotes Bernard Cohen p 164 2000 Mark 1 rebooted Retrieved July 28 2021 Bernard Cohen p 53 2000 Bernard Cohen p 39 2000 It was first rejected by the Monroe Calculator Company and then by Harvard University IBM s ASCC introduction 2 January 23 2003 Retrieved December 14 2013 Proposed automatic calculating machine Abstract IEEE Spectrum IEEE Xplore 1 8 62 69 August 1964 doi 10 1109 MSPEC 1964 6500770 ISSN 0018 9235 S2CID 51652725 IBM Archives Feeds speeds and specifications ASCC Statistics www 03 ibm com January 23 2003 IBM Archives FAQ Products and Services Computer Oral History Collection 1969 1973 1977 Grace Murray Hopper Interview January 7 1969 Archives Center National Museum of American History Archived copy PDF pp 7 8 Archived from the original PDF on February 23 2012 Retrieved October 21 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Maurice Vincent Wilkes 1956 Automatic Digital Computers New York John Wiley amp Sons pp 16 20 Campbell 1999 p 43 Beyer Kurt W 2015 Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age BookBaby pp 78 79 ISBN 9781483550497 Bloch Richard February 22 1984 Oral history interview with Richard M Bloch 9 10 hdl 11299 107123 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Erwin Tomash Library on the History of Computing An Annotated and Illustrated Catalog www cbi umn edu CBI Hosted Publications 1948 Image Harvard Vol 16 1948 subsiderary sequence mechanism description H Chapter pp 577 578 Retrieved May 8 2018 ASCC operational manual subsidiary sequence control pp 22 50 57 73 91 Campbell 1999 p 53 Wexelblat Richard L Ed 1981 History of Programming Languages p 20 New York Academic Press ISBN 0 12 745040 8 Williams Kathleen November 10 2012 Grace Hopper Admiral of the Cyber Sea Naval Institute Press pp 33 34 ISBN 9781612512655 Retrieved August 7 2019 Columbia University Computing History L J Comrie Retrieved December 15 2013 The Columbia Difference Tabulator 1931 Retrieved December 15 2013 a b AIKEN p 166 2000 Bernard Cohen p 164 2000 Atomic Heritage Foundation John von Neumann Retrieved May 12 2019 a b Emerson W Pugh 1995 Building IBM Shaping an Industry and Its Technology MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 16147 3 Martin Campbell Kelly William Aspray 1996 Computer A History of the Information Machine Basic Books p 74 ISBN 0 465 02989 2 Mark 1 rebooted Retrieved July 28 2021 Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Mark I Atlas Obscura Retrieved May 24 2016 PublicationsCohen Bernard 2000 Howard Aiken Portrait of a computer pioneer Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press ISBN 978 0 2625317 9 5 Cohen Bernard ed 1999 Makin Numbers Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press ISBN 0 262 03263 5 Campbell Robert 1999 Aiken s First Machine in Cohen 1999 pp 31 63 Copeland Jack 2006 Machine against Machine in Copeland B Jack ed Colossus The Secrets of Bletchley Park s Codebreaking Computers Oxford Oxford University Press pp 64 77 ISBN 978 0 19 284055 4 Zuse Konrad 1993 The Computer My life Berlin Pringler Verlag ISBN 0 387 56453 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harvard Mark I Cruz Frank da August 2004 The IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator Columbia University Computing History Retrieved April 23 2011 Oral history interview with Robert Hawkins at Charles Babbage Institute University of Minnesota Minneapolis Hawkins discusses the Harvard IBM Mark I project that he worked on at Harvard University as a technician as well as Howard Aiken s leadership of the project Oral history interview with Richard M Bloch at Charles Babbage Institute University of Minnesota Minneapolis Bloch describes his work at the Harvard Computation Laboratory for Howard Aiken on the Mark I Oral history interview with Robert V D Campbell at Charles Babbage Institute University of Minnesota Minneapolis Campbell discusses the contributions of Harvard and IBM to the Mark I project IBM Archive IBM ASCC Reference Room 1 book excerpt web page with illustrations by Herb Grosch from Grosch Herbert R J 1991 Computer Bit Slices From a Life Third Millennium Books ISBN 0 88733 085 1 Third edition online in 2003 2 Popular Science October 1944 Page 86 ASCC operational manual PDF Photo with parts of the machine identified IBM ASCC Mark I computer framed photograph Objects The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments waywiser rc fas harvard edu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harvard Mark I amp oldid 1119601333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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