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Unloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computer

CERN's first computer, a huge vacuum-tube Ferranti Mercury, was installed in building 2 in 1958. With its 60 microsecond clock cycle, it was a million times slower than today's big computers. The Mercury took 3 months to install and filled a huge room, even so, its computational ability di...

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Autor principal: CERN PhotoLab
Publicado: 1960
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/40014
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author CERN PhotoLab
author_facet CERN PhotoLab
author_sort CERN PhotoLab
collection CERN
description CERN's first computer, a huge vacuum-tube Ferranti Mercury, was installed in building 2 in 1958. With its 60 microsecond clock cycle, it was a million times slower than today's big computers. The Mercury took 3 months to install and filled a huge room, even so, its computational ability didn't quite match that of a modern pocket calculator. "Mass" storage was provided by four magnetic drums each holding 32K x 20 bits - not enough to hold the data from a single proton-proton collision in the LHC. It was replaced in 1960 by the IBM 709 computer, seen here being unloaded at Cointrin airport. Although it was taken over so quickly by transistor equipped machines, a small part of the Ferranti Mercury remains. The computer's engineers installed a warning bell to signal computing errors - it can still be found mounted on the wall in a corridor of building 2.
id cern-40014
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 1960
record_format invenio
spelling cern-400142019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/40014CERN PhotoLabUnloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computerComputers and Control RoomsCERN's first computer, a huge vacuum-tube Ferranti Mercury, was installed in building 2 in 1958. With its 60 microsecond clock cycle, it was a million times slower than today's big computers. The Mercury took 3 months to install and filled a huge room, even so, its computational ability didn't quite match that of a modern pocket calculator. "Mass" storage was provided by four magnetic drums each holding 32K x 20 bits - not enough to hold the data from a single proton-proton collision in the LHC. It was replaced in 1960 by the IBM 709 computer, seen here being unloaded at Cointrin airport. Although it was taken over so quickly by transistor equipped machines, a small part of the Ferranti Mercury remains. The computer's engineers installed a warning bell to signal computing errors - it can still be found mounted on the wall in a corridor of building 2.CERN-PHOTO-60112912CERN-CO-6002912oai:cds.cern.ch:400141960-11-05
spellingShingle Computers and Control Rooms
CERN PhotoLab
Unloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computer
title Unloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computer
title_full Unloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computer
title_fullStr Unloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computer
title_full_unstemmed Unloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computer
title_short Unloading at Cointrin Airport of the IBM 709 computer
title_sort unloading at cointrin airport of the ibm 709 computer
topic Computers and Control Rooms
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/40014
work_keys_str_mv AT cernphotolab unloadingatcointrinairportoftheibm709computer