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How the World's First Computer Was Rescued From the Scrap Heap

anavictoriasaavedra sends this quote from Wired: "Eccentric billionaires are tough to impress, so their minions must always think big when handed vague assignments. Ross Perot's staffers did just that in 2006, when their boss declared that he wanted to decorate his Plano, Texas, headquarters with relics from computing history. Aware that a few measly Apple I's and Altair 880's wouldn't be enough to satisfy a former presidential candidate, Perot's people decided to acquire a more singular prize: a big chunk of ENIAC, the "Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer." The ENIAC was a 27-ton, 1,800-square-foot bundle of vacuum tubes and diodes that was arguably the world's first true computer. The hardware that Perot's team diligently unearthed and lovingly refurbished is now accessible to the general public for the first time, back at the same Army base where it almost rotted into oblivion.

11 of 126 comments (clear)

  1. Ross Perot is awesome! by Obscene_CNN · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ross Perot is awesome! Damn shame that Clinton got elected.

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  2. Except... by SkunkPussy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...it wasn't the first computer.

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    SURELY NOT!!!!!
    1. Re:Except... by arth1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Several years later than this one:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z...

      The Z3 was the first electromechanical gp computer
      The ABC was the first electronic non-gp computer
      The Colossus was the first electronic gp computer
      The ENIAC was the first American gp computer.

    2. Re:Except... by beelsebob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Colossus absolutely was general purpose - it just wasn't stored program. You had to set it up fresh for each program.

    3. Re:Except... by Baloroth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Colossus absolutely was general purpose - it just wasn't stored program. You had to set it up fresh for each program.

      No, it wasn't general purpose. It was designed from the ground up to solve a very specific class of problems. It would have been possible (as the linked article states) to put a bunch of them together to form a Universal Turing computer, but it itself was not general purpose nor Turing complete.

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    4. Re:Except... by Solandri · · Score: 3, Informative

      Before you younguns turn this into a "those silly Americans" thread, Colossus was absolutely essential to breaking the Nazi Enigma code and was classified during and after WWII. ENIAC was therefore regarded worldwide as the world's first general purpose computer. Everyone who went to school before 1996 was taught that ENIAC was the world's first GP computer.

      Information about Colossus was first declassified in 1975, but it wasn't until 1996 (not coincidentally 50 years after WWII ended) that enough about it was declassified for the general public to realize it was in fact the first GP computer.

  3. the first built in the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    not the world's first.

    1. Re:the first built in the US by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, Colossus was General Purpose

      True, but only as long as all your purposes are restricted to cracking the codes from a particular model of Nazi mechanical encryption device.

  4. ENIAC wasn't the first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    ENIAC wasn't the first electronic programmable computer. Colossus was. It was used for code breaking in WW2. Colossus Mark 1 was up and running by December 1943, and Mark 2 (using shift registers to increase speed) was up and running by June 1944. The only reason people think of ENIAC instead of Colossus, was that Colossus's existence was kept secret up until the 1970s. By that time ENIAC got all the publicity.

    1. Re:ENIAC wasn't the first by whoever57 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Manchester "Baby" is also claimed to be the first true computer. Both Colossus and ENIAC are not full computers in the way we understand them now.

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  5. Essentially lost: only 8 out of 40 panels by unimacs · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So essentially ENIAC is lost.

    What's left is only a quarter of the original machine that's been turned into some light show. The other 3/4 of the panels are owned by other people or are gone entirely. While I'm not saying it wasn't worth doing or that it wasn't hard work, it's not what I would call "refurbished".

    It's like digging up a skeleton and having someone rig up a motion detector to play recorded phrases and move the jaw as people walk by it.

    Unfortunately there seems to be a period of time where things are just old and past their usefulness, - their historical significance takes more time for people to appreciate. I understand that a true restoration would be hugely impractical, but it would be cool.