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&. Howard Hathaway Aiken. Presentation by. Matthew Campbell. Abstractions & Practicalities April 20 th , 2004. The Man Behind the Machine. Howard Hathaway Aiken Born: March 9 th , 1900 Died: March 17 th , 1973 Harvard graduate student in Theoretical Physics
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& Howard Hathaway Aiken Presentation by Matthew Campbell Abstractions & PracticalitiesApril 20th, 2004
The Man Behind the Machine • Howard Hathaway Aiken • Born: March 9th, 1900 • Died: March 17th, 1973 • Harvard graduate student in Theoretical Physics • Inventor of the Harvard Mark Series
8 Feet 51 Feet The ASCC • The Automatic Sequence-Controlled Calculator, also known as the Harvard Mark I • The first electromagnetic digital calculator in the United States.
Developement • Aiken proposed the idea for an automatic calculator in the 1930’s, first to the Harvard Physics Department, then to the Monroe Calculating Machine Company, and eventually to IBM. • IBM was impressed with the idea and set some of their best engineers to aid Aiken at the IBM research lab. • Although slowed by wartime issues, the machine was unveiled to Harvard in 1944.
Specifications • The Harvard Mark I was capable of 5 operations: • addition • subtraction • multiplication • division • reference to last results
Mathematical Problems Addressed by the ASCC • computation and tabulation of functions • evaluation of integrals • solution of ordinary differential equations • solution of simultaneous linear algebraic equations • harmonic analysis • statistical analysis.
Specifications (cont.) • Fed a sequence of instructions via punch-cards • The ASCC could computer to 23 significant figures • A single addition took about 6 seconds • Division took 12 seconds.
Even More Specifications • You could also provide input through hundreds of manually-set switches • This machine was used to calculate repetitive data tables for the military during the war.
The SSEC • The Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator was the successor of the ASCC • Build by Aiken in 1948 • Was more than 250 times faster than the ASCC
Sources • The IBM Archives http://www-1.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/markI/markI_intro.html • Aiken’s Biography http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Aiken.html