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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
Longer titles found:
UNIVAC II (view ),
UNIVAC III (view )
searching for UNIVAC I 10 found (105 total)
alternate case: uNIVAC I
Timeline of programming languages
(271 words)
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Year Name Chief developer, company Predecessor(s) 1950 Short Code (for UNIVAC I ) William F. Schmitt Short Code 1951 Superplan Heinz Rutishauser Plankalkül
The Computer Museum, Boston
(3,388 words)
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explaining core memory. Machines for big business were exemplified by a UNIVAC I installation and an IBM System 360. The emergence of computer programming
Pacific Life
(1,083 words)
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company west of the Mississippi River to use the brand new technology of Univac I . At Pacific Mutual Life's one-hundredth birthday the company celebrated
ARITH-MATIC
(122 words)
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and ARITH-MATIC Systems for Algebraic Translation and Compilation for Univac I and II (PDF) (Technical report). Philadelphia, Penn.: Remington Rand Univac
7AK7
(200 words)
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7AK7 vacuum tubes in a 1956 UNIVAC I computer
List of computer scientists
(5,148 words)
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first general-purpose electronic digital computer, and EDVAC, BINAC and UNIVAC I , the first commercial computer; worked with Jean Bartik on ENIAC and Grace
Samuel N. Alexander
(522 words)
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It was the fastest fully functional computer for about a year until the UNIVAC I came out in 1951. It also served as a model for other government computers
Bernard Marshall Gordon
(1,801 words)
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supervisory control, and input/output circuits of the first commercial computer, UNIVAC I . He subsequently worked at the Laboratory for Electronics (LFE), a spinoff
UNIVAC 1100/2200 series
(5,570 words)
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III tape drives were supported, both of which could use either metallic (UNIVAC I ) or mylar tape. The FH880 drum memory unit was also supported as a spooling
Timeline of women in computing
(6,831 words)
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programming. She co-designed the C-10 language in the early 1950s for the UNIVAC I – a computer system that was used to calculate the census. Kathleen Booth