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EDSAC (akronim od ang. Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator) – komputer oparty na architekturze von Neumanna, skonstruowany przez zespół Maurice'a Wilkesa z University of Cambridge Mathematical Laboratory, na którym pierwszy program uruchomiono 6 maja 1949 r.
The Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator (EDSAC) was an early British computer. [1] Inspired by John von Neumann's seminal First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC, the machine was constructed by Maurice Wilkes and his team at the University of Cambridge Mathematical Laboratory in England.
EDSAC (singkatan dari Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator) adalah sebuah komputer awal Inggris, [1] yang terinsiprasi dari sebuah laporan milik von Neumann yang berjudul First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC. Mesin komputer EDSAC diciptakan oleh Manuce Wilkes dan rekan-rekannya di Laboratorium Matematika di Universitas Cambridge.
EDSAC, the first full-size stored-program computer, built at the University of Cambridge, Eng., by Maurice Wilkes and others to provide a formal computing service for users. EDSAC was built according to the von Neumann machine principles enunciated by the Hungarian American scientist John von.
The EDSAC was the world’s first stored-program computer to operate a regular computing service. Designed and built at Cambridge University, the EDSAC performed its first fully automatic calculation on 6 May 1949.
EDSAC (singkatan dari Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator) adalah sebuah komputer awal Inggris, yang terinsiprasi dari sebuah laporan milik von Neumann yang berjudul First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC.
To celebrate an early triumph of British computer technology – and the creation of the world’s first practical electronic stored program computer. To give us a better understanding of our computer heritage and create a new archive of historic material about early computing.