ENIAC

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(Omdirigert frå Eniac)
ENIAC

Typedatamaskin, one-of-a-kind computer, decimal computer
DesignarJohn Mauchly, J. Presper Eckert, Jeffrey Chuan Chu, Arthur Burks, Harry Huskey
EtterfølgjarUNIVAC I

ENIAC var ein av verdas første programmerbare elektroniske datamaskinar. Namnet stod for Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer.[1][2] Han vart utvikla for hæren i USA, og kom i drift i 1945,[3][4] eit par år etter den britiske maskinen Colossus. Det opphavlege målet var å rekna ut ballistiske tabellar for skyting med artilleri,[5] men den fyrste oppgåva var å finna kor mogleg det var å laga termonukleære våpen.[6][7] Maskinen var i kontinuerleg drift fram til 1955.[2]

Kjelder[endre | endre wikiteksten]

  1. Eckert Jr., John Presper and Mauchly, John W.; Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, United States Patent Office, US Patent 3,120,606, filed 1947-06-26, issued 1964-02-04; invalidated 1973-10-19 after court ruling in Honeywell v. Sperry Rand.
  2. 2,0 2,1 Weik, Martin H. «The ENIAC Story». Ordnance (Washington, DC: American Ordnance Association) (January–Februar 1961). Arkivert frå originalen 14. august 2011. Henta 29. mars 2015. 
  3. «3.2 First Generation Electronic Computers (1937-1953)». www.phy.ornl.gov. 
  4. «ENIAC on Trial – 1. Public Use». www.ushistory.org. Search for 1945. Henta 16. mai 2018. «The ENIAC machine [...] was reduced to practice no later than the date of commencement of the use of the machine for the Los Alamos calculations, December 10, 1945.» 
  5. Moye, William T. (January 1996). «ENIAC: The Army-Sponsored Revolution». US Army Research Laboratory. Arkivert frå originalen 21. mai 2017. Henta 29. mars 2015. 
  6. Richard Rhodes (1995). «chapter 13». Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. s. 251. «The first problem assigned to the first working electronic digital computer in the world was the hydrogen bomb. […] The ENIAC ran a first rough version of the thermonuclear calculations for six weeks in December 1945 and January 1946.» 
  7. McCartney 1999, s. 103: "ENIAC correctly showed that Teller's scheme would not work, but the results led Teller and Ulam to come up with another design together."