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“Manchester and Early Computers”
Christopher P Burton
The Computer Conservation Society
• “What do you mean - ‘Computer’?”
• The first Manchester computer - “The Baby”
• Interlude - what was going on elsewhere
• The early Manchester computers
• Replicating “The Baby”
Numerical Tables
Books of tables from the 18th century
Early adding machines
Pascal 17th c.
de Colmar 1824
Charles Babbage
Mathematician
Philosopher
Genius
Analytical Engine - 1838
CONTROL mechanism
“Operations” cards a + b
c
b
a x b
e - a
e
b
STOREfor numbers
MILLarithmetic
Babbage’s Analytical Engine
The only fragment ever constructed
Arrival of Electronics
Wireless sets
Television
Radar
Colossus Codebreaking Machine
Electronic, very fast
1943, UK
Secret!
ENIAC Machine
Electronic, very fast
1945, USA
Huge
Fixed Program Computer - 1940s
STOREfor numbers
CONTROL mechanism
MILLarithmetic
Stored Program Computer - 1940s
STOREfor numbers &
instructions
CONTROL mechanism
MILLarithmetic
Instructions
What is a True Computer?
• A list of instructions to manipulate numbers (e.g. “add”, “copy”, “test” or “remember”) to be carried out one instruction after another - “a Program”
• Instructions are represented by numbers, therefore a program can modify itself
• Needs a big memory to hold the program and the numbers
Need for Electronic “Memory”
• “What do you mean - ‘Computer’?”
• The first Manchester computer - “The Baby”
• Interlude - what was going on elsewhere
• The early Manchester computers
• Replicating “The Baby”
Quest for a memory
• By 1945, several research teams were seeking a fast memory device.
• FC Williams and Tom Kilburn at Manchester University.
• During the war they had been expert radar engineers and they believed they could solve the memory problem using radar cathode ray tubes.
Freddie Williams and Tom KilburnIn 1950
Quest for a memory
• The Cathode Ray Tube Store could remember over 2000 binary digits by end of 1947
• But would it work in a computing machine?
• It needed to be tested “…in the hurly-burly of computing.”
The Need for Realistic Testing
• So they built a little computer to test their memory invention.
• Formally, it was: “The Small-Scale Experimental Machine”
• but informally: “Baby”
The Historic Event
• Monday, 21st June 1948, about 11:15
• The first time in the world that a stored-program computer worked
• The “Baby” was the World’s first Universal Computing Machine
• Nearly all modern computers are “like” that.
The Illustrated London News
The First program
From a notebook kept by Geoff Tootill
Dots & Dashes
A film fragment showing the computer probably in 1948
• “What do you mean - ‘Computer’?”
• The first Manchester computer - “The Baby”
• Interlude - what was going on elsewhere
• The early Manchester computers
• Replicating “The Baby”
Interlude - What was happening elsewhere?
• University of Cambridge 1946 - 1949
• National Physical Laboratory 1947 - 1950
• Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton -1952
• IBM - 1953
Cambridge - EDSAC
London - Pilot ACE
USA - von Neumann
IBM uses the Cathode Ray Tube store
• “What do you mean - ‘Computer’?”
• The first Manchester computer - “The Baby”
• Interlude - what was going on elsewhere
• The early Manchester computers
• Replicating “The Baby”
Early Manchester Computers
1948 -The “Baby” - The Small-Scale Experimental Machine
1949 - The University Mark 1 computer
1951 - The Ferranti Mark 1 computer
1954 - MEG
1957 - Ferranti Mercury
1953 - Transistor machine
1956 - Metropolitan Vickers MV950
1958 - Muse
1962 - Ferranti Atlas
Small-Scale Experimental Machine 1948 - Manchester
Illustrated London News photowith annotations
A newsreel film showing the enlarged computer in about June 1949
The Ferranti company gets involved
• Sir Ben Lockspeiser in 1948
• “Construct one computer to Professor Williams’s instructions”
The Ferranti Mk 1 Computer - 1951(World’s first commercially-delivered computer)
MEG - Ten times faster - 1954
Ferranti “Mercury” -1957
University Transistor Computer - 1953
Metro-Vick MV950 - 1956
University “MUSE” - 1958
University/Ferranti “ATLAS” - 1962
• “What do you mean - ‘Computer’?”
• The first Manchester computer - “The Baby”
• Interlude - what was going on elsewhere
• The early Manchester computers
• Replicating “The Baby”
The Computer Conservation Society
The Small-Scale Experimental Machine Rebuild Project
THE MUSEUMOF SCIENCE &INDUSTRY INMANCHESTER
Project Goal
“ To construct a working replica of the
Manchester UniversitySmall-Scale Experimental Machine
by Sunday, 21st June 1998
the 50th anniversary of the successful running of the world's first stored computer program
and to re-run that program. ”
SSEM - Building the Replica
• 1995 to June 1998 - 3½ years to do it all
• Fully sponsored by ICL - purchasing and use of workshops
• Acquire the obsolete parts, valves etc.
• Design studies - technical detective work
Dai Edwards’ Drawing of the Clock Circuit
Alec Robinson’s version of the Clock Circuit
Our Computer-Aided-Design version of the Clock Circuit
Illustrated London News Photo of Typewriter
The Mark 1 in 1949
Close-up of Mark 1 Typewriter
Cover of War Surplus
Catalogue
Catalogue Page with Push Button Unit
Replica of the “Baby”
Now a video of the re-building
Small-Scale Experimental MachineRebuild Project
Thanks to:
The University of Manchester for facilities and support
Our sole sponsor - ICL, West Gorton
The pioneer team for consultation and encouragement
The Museum of Science and Industry for a final home
Many individuals for information and parts
My team of CCS members for their volunteer effort