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Judee
06-18-2008, 02:02 AM
Wow! Imagine one of these in your living room? :eek5:

Oh Baby! First photograph of early modern computer


http://www.physorg.com/newman/gfx/news/ohbabyfirstp.jpg
A photograph of a development version of the Baby computer from around 1948.


Here is the first known photograph of the great grandfather of modern digital computers – but you couldn’t use it on the train or take it jogging with you.


The panoramic black and white image, which has been unearthed in the archives at The University of Manchester, shows a development version of ‘The Baby’ taking up a whole room with its towering Post Office racks and jumble of wiring.

The Small Scale Experimental Machine – to give the Manchester invention its full title – successfully executed its first program on 21 June 1948 – and paved the way for the computers, iPods and mobile phones we all take for granted today.

Built and designed by Tom Kilburn and Freddie Williams at The University of Manchester, it was the first electronic digital computer capable of storing a program.

There are no photographs of the original Baby from June 1948. The panoramic image is often described as a photograph of the Baby machine, but it actually shows an intermediate stage, beginning to resemble the later University Mark 1.

The panoramic view of the machine was first published in The Illustrated London News in June 1949 and is actually a composite view made up of about 24 separate photographs taken by one of the project team, Alec Robinson. An entry in his notebook showed that they were taken on 15 December 1948.

The Baby was built using metal Post Office racks, hundreds of valves or vacuum tubes and the keyboard was a series of push buttons and switches, mounted vertically. Instead of a screen, the output was read directly off the face of a Cathode Ray Tube (CRT).

In modern terms the prototype Baby had a RAM (random access memory) of just 32 locations or ‘words’. Each word in the RAM consisted of 32 bits (binary digits) and so The Baby had a grand total of 1024 bits of memory – and a computing speed of 1.2 milliseconds per instruction.

And amazingly, today a pocket-sized 80Gb Apple iPod is capable of storing 640 MILLION times more information than the original room-sized Baby.

Manchester, Cambridge and institutions in the United States all battled to built the first stored program computer but Manchester won the race – a feat that shook the world and placed the city at the forefront of a global technological revolution.

Tom Kilburn founded and led the Department of Computer Science at the University, the first in the UK.

On Friday 20 June 2008, The University and the City of Manchester will celebrate the 60th anniversary of the tremendous achievement of Kilburn and Williams with Digital 60 Day.

The programme includes a live demonstration of the working replica of The Baby at the Museum of Science and Industry (MOSI), an interactive Baby exhibit and a Computer Science Magic Show.

Four surviving member of the Baby design and development team will be awarded the Medal of Honour by The University of Manchester and also by the British Computer Society.

Professor Steve Furber CBE, designer of the BBC Microcomputer, will then deliver the inaugural Kilburn lecture on ‘The Relentless March of the Microchip’.

For more information about Digital 60 please see http://www.digital60.org .

Source: University of Manchester

http://www.physorg.com/news132933413.html

axl
06-18-2008, 10:01 AM
imagine that for a wrist watch ?
i remember the 80s and when a new watch that was digital was the latest thing out . i dont know if any one can remembr them , they had dark glass and had red numbers , not long afer that the lcd screen were the latest things out .

a long time a go an army top brass scenior stated on tv

there is absolutly no reason what so ever as to why a civilian would need a computer in the home .

now look ! we cant practicly cope with out them .

im surprised that computer on your thread doesn't have levers and breaks from a bike and runs on steam .

makes a change looking at history and seeing it from here , just think , in those days , it was the hights of technology .

Judee
06-18-2008, 02:21 PM
Hey axl. I'm going to date myself here, and say that one of my first jobs was in the accounting department of a huge finance company. The computer took up an entire room which had to be kept at a constant temperature. It used zillions of 'punch cards' to input data. It was noisy and a pain in the butt! I don't think it was too far advanced from the one in the photograph! :) Wow! Do I feel old now or what? :31:

Demetrius
06-18-2008, 02:48 PM
Hey axl. I'm going to date myself here, and say that one of my first jobs was in the accounting department of a huge finance company. The computer took up an entire room which had to be kept at a constant temperature. It used zillions of 'punch cards' to input data. It was noisy and a pain in the butt! I don't think it was too far advanced from the one in the photograph! :) Wow! Do I feel old now or what? :31:

Hey Judee, you're not alone here. My job in the Air Force in the late 70's was as a computer operator. Our main frame and associated peripherals took up a whole room too. We had reel to reel tape storage also but almost every job we ran required trays and trays of card input. Heaven forbide if you ever drop a tray while inputing cards because they tend to go spraying across the floor and alot of times they had to be in a particular order. It could take hours to get them back in order.

Judee
06-18-2008, 03:16 PM
Hey Judee, you're not alone here. My job in the Air Force in the late 70's was as a computer operator. Our main frame and associated peripherals took up a whole room too. We had reel to reel tape storage also but almost every job we ran required trays and trays of card input. Heaven forbide if you ever drop a tray while inputing cards because they tend to go spraying across the floor and alot of times they had to be in a particular order. It could take hours to get them back in order.

Hi Demetrius! So it wasn't all a bad dream of mine from long ago then? :lmao: So glad to hear there's someone else that remembers what it was like back in the days 'when dinosaurs roamed the earth'! Sounds like our systems were pretty much the same. We used reel to reel tape AND punch cards also! It was the SOUND of the thing that I remember the most however. You could barely talk over the noise. :sour: But those were good days weren't they? :sigh1:

VOguy
06-18-2008, 05:09 PM
When I read about early computers, I'm reminded of the early PCs and the words of one of my mentors.

It was the dawn of the CD. The radio station I was working at had just purchased thousands of dollars of CD players and compact audio discs. My mentor, John, held up a floppy disc and said "one day, we will use these in place of tape cartridges." I thought that was the funniest thing ever.

Today, I could not live without my computer editor. I do 70% of my business on it, and probably another 10% of my hobby time is working with audio.

Imagine.... audio on floppys and hard drives! What's the world coming to?

axl
06-18-2008, 05:27 PM
i cant remember further back than 78s vinals , rock & roll , and , yes , large brown reels of tape going from one large transparent old film like disc to another .

rewinding was a pain in the -ss.

mind you , 78s disapeared , but 45s stayed in until 80s i believe .

VOguy
06-18-2008, 05:29 PM
I still work with 78s, 45s, LPs, and occasionally old tape as a matter of my hobby. It's fun, but a lot of work.

axl
06-18-2008, 05:52 PM
are voguy ? maybe your the soul ?

i have 300 vinals in the attick .

the 45 12inch version of the original ( not re-released but orignial ) war of the worlds disco 12 inch , 45rpm record .

16minit original ---donna summers 12inch 45rpm -- i feel love .

and yes , a real 12inch 33rpm record of the platters , all signed bye the platters and not scratched . ( ie they were found in my fathers house after his death. im not ungreatfull , i just know they need a good home . what better way is there to justify it )

if you know any one interested or any email addresses , i would be greatfull as these vinals are heavy , i dont listen to them , and they are gathering dust .

they should go , to a person who apreciates them .

Mcnowhere
06-18-2008, 07:11 PM
That picture sure does bring back memories of 1977 for me. I applied for a job and it involved a computer, so I was told. I got the job and before I started, I kept thinking that I would be in a room all day with all this machinery around me that would look just like that picture. Well, it turned out that I got to key punch info into a Munro Programmable calculator that was the size of our PC's of today. It also had cards to change the program.

Demetrius
06-18-2008, 07:42 PM
Hi Demetrius! So it wasn't all a bad dream of mine from long ago then? :lmao: So glad to hear there's someone else that remembers what it was like back in the days 'when dinosaurs roamed the earth'! Sounds like our systems were pretty much the same. We used reel to reel tape AND punch cards also! It was the SOUND of the thing that I remember the most however. You could barely talk over the noise. :sour: But those were good days weren't they? :sigh1:

Yes Judee, simpler times, simpler days...I miss them too. Part of my job now involves working in a server room... it's turning into a server farm now). It's kinda loud too because of all the AC units we have to run to keep it cool. Isn't it amazing how much louder and exaspirating life gets with all this wonderful technology!!! Sometimes I wish I could just unplug.

williamstade
06-18-2008, 09:50 PM
Geesh. I'm glad this came up. My biological father worked for IBM back in the sixties.

The Relentless March of the Microchip was The University of Manchester's choice of titles? It certainly has taken us fairly quickly given its clunky huge humble beginnings. What's next? A Virual Reality living room, aw any old room, however Virtualized as an utter and complete user driven den or spare room perhaps?? What a thought! I'm 39 and would get one if it were an affordable price. Maybe even buy land for the friggin' thing if I were that degree of affluent. LOL. The imagination reels. Thing might stay puely in the realm of the "fantasy prone".

William