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UNIVAC 1101
The '''UNIVAC 1101''', or '''ERA 1101''', was a computer system designed by Engineering Research Associates (ERA) and built by the Remington Rand corporation in the 1950s. It was the first stored program computer in the U.S. Remington Rand used the 1101's architecture as the basis for a series of machines into the 1960s.
History
Codebreaking
ERA was formed from a group of code-breakers working for the United States Navy during World War II. The team had built a number of code breaking machines, similar to the more famous Colossus computer in England, but designed to attack Japanese codes. After the war the Navy was interested in keeping the team together even though they had to formally be turned out of Navy service. The result was ERA, which formed in St. Paul, Minnesota in the hangars of a former Chase Aircraft shadow factory.
After the war the team continued to build codebreaking machines, targeted at specific codes. After one of these codes changed, the team convinced the Navy that the only way to make a system that would remain useful was to build a fully programmable computer. The Navy was convinced, and in 1947 they funded development of a new system under "Task 13". The resulting machines, known as "Atlas", used drum memory for main memory and featured a simple central processing unit built for integer math. Two Atlas machines were built and installed in December 1950. A faster version using Williams tubes and drums was delivered to the NSA in 1953.
Commercialization
The company turned to the task of selling the systems commercially. Atlas was named after a character in the popular comic strip Barnaby (comic strip)|Barnaby.[http://www.ksu.edu/english/nelp/purple/characters/cartoons.html#atlas], and they initially decided to name the commercial versions "Mabel". Jack Hill suggested "1101" instead; 1101 is the binary representation of the number 13. The '''ERA 1101''' was publicly announced in December 1951. Atlas II, slightly modified became the ERA 1103, while a more heavily modified version with core memory and floating point math support became the UNIVAC 1103A.
At at about this time the company became embroiled in a lengthy series of political maneuverings in Washington, DC. Drew Pearson's ''Washington Merry-Go-Round'' claimed that the founding of ERA was a conflict of interest for Norris and Engstrom because they had used their war-time government connections to set up a company for their own profit. The resulting legal fight left the company drained, both financially and emotionally. In 1952 they were purchased by Remington Rand, largely as a result of these problems.
Remington Rand had recently purchased Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation, builders of the famed UNIVAC I, the first commercial computer in the US. Although ERA and UNIVAC were run separately within the company, looking to cash in on the UNIVAC's well known name, they renamed the machine to become the "UNIVAC 1101". A series of machines based on the same basic design followed, and were sold into the 1960s before being replaced by the similar-in-name-only UNIVAC 1100 family.
Description
This computer was 38 feet long (11.5 m), 20 feet wide (6 m), and used 2700 vacuum tubes for its logic circuits. Its drum memory was 8.5 inches in diameter (21.6 cm), rotated at 3500 rpm, had 200 read-write heads, and held 16,384 24-bit words (a memory size equivalent to 48 kilobyte|kB) with access time between 32 microseconds and 17 milliseconds.
Instruction set|Instructions were 24 bits long, with 6 bits for the opcode, 4 bits for the "skip" value (telling how many memory locations to skip to get to the next instruction in program sequence), and 14 bits for the memory address. Numbers were binary with negative values in one's complement. The addition time was 96 microseconds and the multiplication time was 352 microseconds.
The single 48-bit Accumulator (computing)|accumulator was fundamentally subtractive, addition being carried out by subtracting the one's complement of the number to be added. This may appear rather strange, but the ''subtractive adder'' reduces the chance of getting negative zero in normal operations.
The machine had 38 instructions.
Instruction Set
See also
- List of UNIVAC products
- History of computing hardware
References
External links
- ''Engineering Research Associates and the Atlas Computer (UNIVAC 1101)'' by George Gray, from the Unisys History Newsletter, Volume 3, Number 3, June, 1999
- ''Introducing the ERA 1101: An operationally proven high-speed, electronic, general purpose digital computer'', ERA, no-date. (8 pp) http://ed-thelen.org/comp-hist/ERA-1101-f09-IntroductingERA1101.pdf
- Oral history interviews with ERA personnel on 1101, Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota. Interviewees include Arnold A. Cohen; Arnold Dumey; John Lindsay Hill; Frank C. Mullaney; and William C. Norris.
- ''ERA 1101 Documents'' list of 44 scanned course notes on 1101 by H. C. Snyder USN
- ''Summary of Characteristics Magnetic Drum Binary Computer'', Engineering Research Associates Pub No. 25, 30 November 1948
Category:UNIVAC hardware|1101
Category:Early computers
Category:Mainframe computers
Category:Military computers
Category:1950 introductions
Related Images- UNIVAC 1101
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