From: jon@powerslv.demon.co.uk (Jon Kale) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers Subject: Re: J.Presper Eckert Jr. Dead at 76 Date: 10 Jun 1995 09:38:00 +0100 In message <3r50s6$b3p@male.EBay.Sun.COM> Bob Morrisette wrote: > > Eckert, co-designer of the ENIAC died last Saturday. > The ENIAC ran from 1945 to 1955 and was the first > general-purpose electronic digital computer. > (subject to some debate) > > We should not forget those who pioneered our industry. > > Sabu From The Times, June 9th (copyright almost certainly belongs to News Intl. but reproduced entirely without permission.) 'They called it "Eniac", an acronym which stood for Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer. It weighe 30 tons, occupied a whole room, and resembled something from an early science-fiction movie with its flashing pink lights, clicking switches and miles of cable. But it worked: just in time to confirm the design calculations for the world's first atomic bomb in 1945. Today's desktop computers, thogh a thousand times faster and a tiny fraction of the size, still use the same principles as the Eniac design. John Presper Eckert and his collaborator, John Mauchly, who died in 1980, had begun work on their computer in 1942, in an effort to solve the problems of compiling ballistic tables for the US Army's artillery batteries.These tables, which involved intricate calculations of wind, humidity, target elevation, distance and the weight of the shell had been a bugbear of artillery officers for centuries. They had to be reformulated every time a small change was made to the guns or ammunition, and during the Second World War the Army became desperate to find some way to simplify the task. Working at the University of Pennsylvania, Eckert and Mauchly designed a computer which contained more than 18,000 vacuum tubes, receiving instructions through hundreds of cables that resembled an old fashioned telephone exchange. The data was fed in by means of stacks of punched cards, and the machine then converted the numbers to a series of 1s and 0s, sending the resultant stream of data through a series of switches called logical "and" and "or" elements. The result was a machine that could complete in 30 seconds a trajectory which had previously taken a clerk 20 hours. Fortuitously, though it was not designed for the purpose, it also proved to be the only device capable of assisting the Manhattan Project. Eniac continued to operate until 1955, but Eckert and Mauchly had moved on at the end of the war to found their own computer firm, the Electronic Control Company, which developed the Binac and Univac computers. The company was later sold to Remington Rand and eventually became the Unisys Corporation, for which Eckert worked in a senior position until his retirement in 1989. The holder of 87 patents, Eckert was involved in controversy in 1973 when a federal court held that one of the most crucial parts of the Eniac design was based on the pioneering work of Dr John Atanasoff, who had invented a computing device called ABC in the 1930s. Eckert vehemently denied the claim. "He never really got anything to work," he said later. "He had no programming system. Mauchly and I achieved a complete workable computer system. Others had not." Presper Eckert is survived by his wife Judith, three sons and one daughter.' -- Cheers __ | /\ |\ | \/ \/ | \|