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History of Computing at IBM by Brian Ho CS147 – Dr. Sin-Min Lee Fall 2009
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Brief Overview of IBM IBM stands for International Business Machines Corporation. Founded in 1896 in Endicott, NY
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Herman Hollerith His punch card tabulating technology was used for the 1890 census, saving the U.S. government $5 mil. Punch cards become the industry standard of input for the next 70 years. His company was later merged into what is now IBM.
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Thomas J. Watson, Sr. Became president of IBM (then C-T-R) in 1914. Built IBM into a global corporation by investing in his employees and research. Hired disabled WWI vets to work for IBM.
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1944 ASCC The world’s first large- scale calculating computer. Automatic Sequence Control Calculator, a.k.a. Mark I. Used electromagnetic relays to solve addition problems in < 1 second, multiplication in 6 seconds, and division in 12 seconds.
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1946 – The IBM 603 The IBM 603 Electronic Multiplier, the first commercial product to incorporate electronic arithmetic circuits. Used vacuum tubes. Part of a program to make “super calculators” Would perform faster than the ASCC.
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1946 – Chinese Character Typewriter WHOA! Chinese ideographic character typewriter. Experienced users could type at a rate of 40 to 45 Chinese words per minute.
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WHOA! Had over 1,000 characters engraved in a cylinder Must have been hard to use!
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1948 – IBM SSEC IBM’s first large-scale digital calculating machine. It was the first computer that could modify a stored program. Contained 12,000 vacuum tubes and 21,000 electromechanical relays.
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1948 – IBM 604 First assemblage of digital electronics replaceable as a unit. Service engineers could pull out a defective unit and plug in a replacement, saving time.
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Thomas Watson, Jr. Became president of IBM in 1952 Moved IBM away from punch cards and into electronic computers.
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1952 – IBM 701 and First CA Research Lab IBM’s first production computer. Designed primarily for scientific calculations. Featured a tape drive vacuum column, which paved the way for magnetic tape to become a popular storage medium. First West Coast lab is opened in San Jose, CA.
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Magnetic Storage Devices
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1953 – IBM 650 Magnetic Drum Calculator The most popular computer of the 1950s. Purchased by universities and businesses for scientific computation and accounting capabilities.
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1954 – NORC The fastest, most powerful electronic computer of its time. Naval Ordnance Research Computer Built for the U.S. Navy Bureau of Ordnance
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1959 – IBM 1401 The first high-volume, stored program, core- memory, transistorized computer. Included the IBM 1403 printer.
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1961 – 7030 STRETCH IBM’s first attempt in the supercomputer industry. Amdahl said it would not meet the performance requirement the government asked for. When it did not meet the requirements in Los Alamos Nation Laboratories in New Mexico, Watson rebated the profit and development cost to the government until it could meet the performance requirements.
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IBM 7030 STRETCH (continued) Pioneered advanced systems concepts: Lookahead Pipelining Use of transistors Use of bytes
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1962 - SABRE Semi-Automatic Business- Related Environment Two IBM 7090 mainframes formed the backbone of the SABRE reservation system for American Airlines. Linked high-speed computers and data communications in more than 50 cities.
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1964 – IBM SYSTEM/360 Incorporated the IBM Solid Logic Technology (SLT) microelectronics Uses the same programming instructions. Created a family of compatible computers.
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1980 – RISC in IBM IBM Fellow John Cocke came up with RISC architecture Reduced Instruction Set Computer IBM’s first prototype employing RISC, the IBM 801
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1985 – Token Ring Network Allowed printers and computers to be connected on a network. Became the industry standard
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1990 – RISC System/6000 A family of 9 workstations that are some of the fastest in the industry. Were able to improve because of RISC architecture
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1997 – Deep Blue Beat the reigning world grandmaster of chess Garry Kasparov in 1997. First time a computer ever beat a world champion in a six game match.
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Blue Gene IBM’s Super Computer Project
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Blue Gene Its name is an allusion to IBM’s nickname “Big Blue” and the corporation’s official color: blue. a computer architecture project designed to produce supercomputers with operating speeds in the petaFLOPS range.
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Blue Gene/L Developed in partnership with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) Started in 1999 Was to be applied to protein folding
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Blue Gene/L (continued) Is a massively parallel computer. Utilizes 8 cabinets, each holding 1,024 computer nodes Was upgraded to 16 cabinets in 2004, achieving 70.72 TFLOPS Upgraded again multiple times, resulting in 64 total cabinets in 2005
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Blue Gene/P Unveiled in 2007 Designed to run continuously at 1 PFLOPS. Features a 72-rack system that can be scaled to an 884,736- processor, 216-rack cluster In its 216-rack configuration, it can achieve 3-PFLOPS performance To be succeeded by Blue Gene/Q, due to reach 20 PFLOPS in 2011.
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IBM Roadrunner Fastest supercomputer in the world. Achieved 1.456 PFLOPS on May 25, 2008. Built for U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
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IBM Roadrunner (continued) Uses a series of TriBlades A TriBlade consists of: 2 dual-core Opterons with 16 GB RAM 4 PowerXCell 8i CPUs with 16 GB Cell RAM A bunch of other stuff
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