- The
Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator (
EDSAC) was an
early British computer.
Inspired by John von Neumann's
seminal First Draft of a Report...
- his team
constructed EDSAC. A
filing cabinet of
punched tape held the
subroutine library for this computer.
Programs for
EDSAC consisted of a main program...
- stored-program computers.
EDSAC ran its
first programs on 6Â May 1949, when it
calculated a
table of
squares and a list of
prime numbers.The
EDSAC also
served as...
-
field included work on the
Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator (
EDSAC) in the 1950s and the Burrows–Wheeler
transform (published 1994). Along...
-
designed and
helped build the
Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator (
EDSAC), one of the
earliest stored program computers, and who
invented microprogramming...
- applications. The
prototype LEO I was
modelled closely on the
Cambridge EDSAC. Its
construction was
overseen by
Oliver Standingford,
Raymond Thompson...
-
EDSAC 2 was an
early vacuum tube
computer (operational in 1958), the
successor to the
Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator (
EDSAC). It was the...
- was
written for the
Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator (
EDSAC).
EDSAC was one of the
first stored-program computers, with
memory that could...
- of computers. Lyons's LEO I computer,
modelled closely on the
Cambridge EDSAC of 1949,
became operational in
April 1951 and ran the world's
first routine...
-
starting in 1953. In
October 1946, work
began under Maurice Wilkes on
EDSAC (Electronic
Delay Storage Automatic Calculator),
which subsequently became...