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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.
One of the first computers in the world, EDSAC is being rebuilt at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park. Andrew Herbert takes us on a walk around inside the computer. Pouring...
EDSAC was modest in terms of modern-day computers. There were only 18 operation codes and initially just 512 words of memory, later extended to 1024. Instructions were executed at a rate of approximately 650 per second. Input was by punched paper-tape and output by teleprinter.
19 lis 2013 · Built by a team led by M.V. Wilkes, EDSAC was the world’s first practical electronic digital computer providing a computing service to the university as a whole. Three Nobel Prizes were attributed to the giant leap in computing power that EDSAC delivered to Cambridge scientists.
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.
9 sty 2013 · Jeśli ktoś interesował się bliżej historią komputerów, z pewnością trafił na informacje o maszynie znanej jako EDSAC (Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator). Maszyna ta została skonstruowana przez Maurice'a Wilkesa i jego zespół na uniwersytecie w Cambridge.
24 lis 2016 · Designed and built in the aftermath of World War II at the University of Cambridge by a team led by pioneering computer scientist Sir Maurice Wilkes, the EDSAC was one of the first practical...