Herman Goldstine, ENIAC Developer, Dies at Age 90
CodeFixer writes "Herman Goldstine, who as a mathematician working at the Ballistic Research Lab convinced the US Army to fund the development of the ENIAC and EDVAC, has died at the age of 90. His obituary can be found at the New York Times and descriptions of his involvement in the development of the ENIAC can be found at the Army Research Laboratory."
Quotes about the ENIAC:
"Thus ended the life of the once glorious pioneer in the field of digital computation"
"It's death was a natural one--it had served its purpose."
As quoted from: The ENIAC Story
If you can read this sig - the bitch fell off.
A great man who paved the way for many other great men and women. as a side note, It's interesting how so much technology, such as ENIAC, get started as tools of war.
IBM also supplied many armies with the punch-card machines/readers used to keep track of war records. the armies included the US army and the German army.
How long will you have to live to see as much change as this guy saw?
The ENIAC Java Applet and the ENIAC on a chip project
I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
Not to denegrate Goldstine's contributions, they were important but he was really more of a project manager .....
Yes, that's true. I enjoyed listening to an audio version of ENIAC: The Triumphs and Tragedies of the World's First Computer Fasinating stuff. I seem to remember that there were a lot of personality clashes.
Could someone "in the know" describe the instruction set and architecture of the ENIAC. Could it be modeled in TTL or discrete transistors? I assume that no one has done a simulator in software.
Goldstine was also related in some way to the German 19th century poet Heinrich Heine, FWIW.
If you look at Goldstine's publication list on MathSciNet (usually only available on University netwoks which subscribe), you find a strong collaboration with von Neumann and early uses of computers to solve scientific problems. For example:
... "
"Preliminary Discussion of the Logical Design of an Electronic Computing Instrument" by Arthur W. Burks, Herman H. Goldstine, and John von Neumann, 2d ed. Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N. J., 1947.
"Planning and Coding of Problems for an Electronic Computing Instrument" by Herman H. Goldstine and John von Neumann, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N. J., 1947.
"Numerical inverting of matrices of high order" by Herman H. Goldstine and John von Neumann, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 53, (1947). 1021--1099.
"Calculation of plane cavity flows past curved obstacles" by G. Birkhoff, H. H. Goldstine and E. H. Zarantonello, Univ. e Politec. Torino. Rend. Sem. Mat. 13 (1954), 205--224 (with a review by David Gilbarg).
"Blast wave calculation" by Herman H. Goldstine and John von Neumann, Comm. Pure Appl. Math. 8 (1955), 327--353.
(I mention Gilbarg's review in part because I had an office (approximately) across from his at Stanford for a semester in 1991.) Gilbarg's review begins
"This paper describes the first systematic calculations ever carried out on cavity and jet flows past curved obstacles, comprising altogether fifty symmetric plane flows past convex and concave bodies, under several different conditions of streamline detachment. The computations were performed on a high speed digital computer, using an improved version of a scheme previously described by Birkhoff, Young, and Zarantonello