I caught a snippet of a story on BBC Radio Manchester today which I now cannot find. It was something to do with the Manchester Baby being re-housed in a better venue in Manchester city centre.
Anyway, from 60 years ago this month, here's Alan Turing with two colleagues and the Ferranti Mark I computer in January 1951:
Link:
It was actually installed earlier than February; it took many months to set up and configure. (Some tosser had lost the Windows licence key.)
More information:
From May 2009: "A short history of computers"
Quite remarkable: from 17 June 2008 :"'Oldest' computer music unveiled"
Links for your own research:
Early computers at Manchester University
The Manchester Mark I
Anyway, from 60 years ago this month, here's Alan Turing with two colleagues and the Ferranti Mark I computer in January 1951:
Link:
The Ferranti Mark I computer installed (sic) at the University of Manchester in February 1951 was the world's first commercial computer. It was based on the Small Scale Experimental Machine (nicknamed the 'Baby') and the full-scale Manchester Mark I computer, both developed at the University. The Baby was the world's first stored-program computer.
More information:
From May 2009: "A short history of computers"
Computers have been on something of a miraculous journey since the Small-Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM) or 'Baby' ran its first program in Manchester in 1948.
October 1950 – Alan Turing is in Manchester working on the Manchester Mark 1, the next generation of 'Baby'.
1951 - The first commercial computer, the 'Ferranti MARK I' is functional at the University of Manchester.
October 1950 – Alan Turing is in Manchester working on the Manchester Mark 1, the next generation of 'Baby'.
1951 - The first commercial computer, the 'Ferranti MARK I' is functional at the University of Manchester.
Quite remarkable: from 17 June 2008 :"'Oldest' computer music unveiled"
Documentary evidence of the Manchester machine's musical abilities exists thanks to a BBC outside broadcasting team who had gone to the University to record an edition of Children's Hour. At the time Manchester was home to a Ferranti Mark 1, the first commercially available general purpose computer.
Links for your own research:
Early computers at Manchester University
The Manchester Mark I
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