Information about Manchester Mark I

This article is about the early British computer. The term "Manchester Mark I" can also refer to the Avro Manchester heavy bomber in RAF service during the early stages of World War II.


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Manchester Mark 1 was the world's first stored program computer, which made its first successful run of a program on 21st June 1948
The Manchester Mark I was one of the earliest electronic computers, built at the University of Manchester in England, in 1949. It was also called Manchester Automatic Digital Machine, or MADM. It was developed from the Small-Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM) or "Baby". It is especially historically significant due to its pioneering inclusion of a kind of index register in its architecture, as well as being the platform on which Autocode was developed, one of the first "high-level" computer languages.

Development of the Mark I started after the SSEM demonstrated the utility of the stored-program approach, which dramatically improved a machine's flexibility. This approach was being looked at by other researchers, notably Alan Turing's efforts on the Pilot ACE, Cambridge University's EDSAC, and EDVAC in the US. The SSEM differed primarily in the choice of memory system, using the much faster Williams tubes instead of mercury delay lines.

With the successful demonstration of the SSEM, the British government contracted Ferranti in October 1948 to deliver a full-scale machine based on its basic concepts. Key improvements in the design were going to include a magnetic drum for loading programs into the machine's Williams tube memory, replacing the SSEM's paper tape, the addition of index registers and a hardware multiplier. The word size was increased slightly from 32-bits to 40, read and written as four 10-bit "short words". Instructions used a single short word, addresses two, and numeric data four. Although the 10-bit instructions could hold up to 1,024 different codes, the machine only had 30 in its final version. Standard instruction time was 1,800 microseconds, but multiplication was much slower. The Ferranti Mark 1 (based on the Manchester Mark 1) had an addition time of 1,200 microseconds and a multiplication time of 2,160 microseconds.

The SSEM included two registers on its Williams tube, the accumulator A and program counter C. Mark I added another, D, for holding one side of a multiplication, leaving B the natural place to hold the index register. Since the system used a 20-bit address, the B-line on the tube held two address offsets. This is the earliest known implementation of such index/base registers – an important innovation in computer architecture, unknown in other machines until the emergence of second-generation computers (approximately 1955–1964). The Mark I included two tubes, each storing 64 rows ("double density") of 40 points, for a total of 128 words. 64 words was considered to be a single "page", so the system stored 4 pages. Freddie Williams deliberately sized the drum to store two "pages" of Williams tube data – that is, 2x32x40 = 2,560 bits – per track, and 32 tracks in total. The drum was timed to spin at the refresh rate of the Willams tubes, allowing pages to be read and written between refreshes, a task that took about 30 cycles.

The first version of the machine was running in April 1949, known as the Intermediary Version. This version was largely feature complete, but lacked input/output instructions to move data from the drum to the tubes or paper tape to the drum.

The first realistic program to be run on the Mark I was a test of Mersenne primes, run in early April 1949. The computer ran error-free for 9 hours on the night of June 16-17, 1949. The Final Specification version was completed in October 1949, adding a second drum and various instructions to read one line of data to and from the drum to tubes and drum to paper tape. Over time the existing drums were used to store more data, typically 47 tracks.

The machine used 4,200 vacuum tubes for logic, which proved to be a terrible reliability problem. In one calculation the machine spent almost 25% of its time "down", due both to the tubes and the drums. Nevertheless the University was successful in attracting commercial users to rent time on the machine for £50 an hour.

After the Mark I was running, development continued in several directions. Dick Grimsdale and Doug Webb attempted to improve the reliability of the Mark I by building the machine out of transistors, perhaps being the first transistorized computer when their prototype ran in November 1953. Their work was later picked up by Metropolitan-Vickers to create the Metrovick 950, of which seven were sold.

The main Mark I team, Tom Kilburn and Freddie Williams, concluded that computers would be used more in scientific roles than pure math, and decided to start development of a new model including a separate floating point unit. The resulting machine, Meg, was both simpler than the Mark I as well as much faster for math problems. Ferranti, who had built the Mark I, rebuilt Meg with core memory and sold the resulting design as the Ferranti Mercury.

Among the Mark I team were mathematicians Conway Berners-Lee and Mary Lee Woods, who would later marry; their son, Tim Berners-Lee, is acknowledged as the inventor of the World Wide Web.

References

  • Lavington, Simon H. (1980). Early British Computers. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-932376-08-8. 

External links

). "Manchester Computer Architectures, 1948-1975". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 15 (3): 44-54. DOI:http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/85.222841 . 
Type heavy bomber
Manufacturer Avro
Maiden flight 25 July, 1939
Introduced November 1940
Primary users Royal Air Force
Royal Canadian Air Force
Produced 1940-1941
Number built 209
Variants
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computer is a machine which manipulates data according to a list of instructions.

Computers take numerous physical forms. The first devices that resemble modern computers date to the mid-20th century (around 1940 - 1941), although the computer concept and various machines
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The University of Manchester is a university located in Manchester, England. With over 40,000 students studying 500 academic programmes, more than 10,000 staff and an annual income of nearly £600 million it is the largest single-site University in the United Kingdom and receives
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Motto
Dieu et mon droit   (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
No official anthem specific to England — the anthem of the United Kingdom is "God Save the Queen".
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1910s  1920s  1930s  - 1940s -  1950s  1960s  1970s
1946 1947 1948 - 1949 - 1950 1951 1952

Year 1949 (MCMXLIX
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The Manchester Small-Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM), nicknamed Baby, was the first stored-program computer to run a program, on June 21, 1948. It was developed by Frederic C. Williams and Tom Kilburn at the University of Manchester.
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An index register in a computer's CPU is a processor register used for modifying operand addresses during the run of a program, typically for doing vector/array operations. Index registers were first used in the British Manchester Mark I computer, in 1949.
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Autocode is the name of a family of high-level programming languages devised in the 50's and 60's for a series of computers at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge.
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The term computer language includes a wide variety of languages used to communicate with computers. It is broader than the more commonly-used term programming language. Programming languages are a subset of computer languages.
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Alan Mathison Turing, OBE, FRS (23 June 1912 – 7 June 1954) was an English mathematician, logician, and cryptographer.

Turing is often considered to be the father of modern computer science.
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The Pilot ACE was one of the first computers built in the United Kingdom, at the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in the late 1940s.

It was a preliminary version of the full ACE, which had been designed by Alan Turing.
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University of Cambridge (often Cambridge University), located in Cambridge, England, is the second-oldest university in the English-speaking world and has a reputation as one of the world's most prestigious universities.
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EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer) was one of the earliest electronic computers. Unlike its predecessor the ENIAC, it was binary rather than decimal, and was a stored program machine.
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The Williams tube or (more accurately) the Williams-Kilburn tube (after Freddie Williams and co-worker Tom Kilburn), developed about 1946 or 1947, was a cathode ray tube used to electronically store binary data.
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Delay line memory was a form of computer memory used on some of the earliest digital computers. Like many modern forms of electronic computer memory, delay line memory was a refreshable memory, but as opposed to modern random access memory, delay line memory was serial
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Ferranti or Ferranti International plc by the time of its collapse, was a major UK electrical engineering and equipment firm, known primarily for defence electronics and power grid systems.
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Drum memory was an early form of computer memory that was widely used in the 1950s and into the 1960s, invented by Gustav Tauschek in 1932 in Austria. For many machines, a drum
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Punched tape or paper tape is a largely obsolete form of data storage, consisting of a long strip of paper in which holes are punched to store data. It was widely used during much of the twentieth century for teleprinter communication, and later as a storage medium for
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To help compare orders of magnitude of different times this page lists times between 10−6 seconds and 10−5 seconds (1 microsecond to 10 microseconds). A microsecond is one millionth of a second.
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Ferranti or Ferranti International plc by the time of its collapse, was a major UK electrical engineering and equipment firm, known primarily for defence electronics and power grid systems.
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accumulator is a register in which intermediate arithmetic and logic results are stored. Without a register like an accumulator, it would be necessary to write the result of each calculation (addition, multiplication, shift, etc.
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The program counter (also called the instruction pointer, part of the instruction sequencer in some computers) is a register in a computer processor which indicates where the computer is in its instruction sequence.
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An index register in a computer's CPU is a processor register used for modifying operand addresses during the run of a program, typically for doing vector/array operations. Index registers were first used in the British Manchester Mark I computer, in 1949.
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history of computing is longer than the history of computing hardware and modern computing technology and includes the history of methods intended for pen and paper or for chalk and slate, with or without the aid of tables.
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Sir Frederic Calland Williams (June 26, 1911. Stockport – August 11 1977. Manchester), known as 'Freddie Williams', was an English engineer.

Williams attended the University of Manchester, and received his doctorate in 1936 at the University of Oxford.
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A Mersenne prime is a Mersenne number that is a prime number.

In mathematics, a Mersenne number is a number that is one less than a power of two,

As of August 2007, only 44 Mersenne primes are known; the largest known prime number (232,582,657
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vacuum tube, electron tube (inside North America), thermionic valve, or just valve (elsewhere); is a device used to amplify, switch, otherwise modify, or create an electrical signal by controlling the movement of electrons in a low-pressure space, often not
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Downtime refers to a period of time or a percentage of a timespan that a machine or system (usually a computer server) is offline or not functioning, usually as a result of either system failure (such as a crash) or routine maintenance. The opposite is uptime.
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Richard Lawrence Grimsdale, (September 18, 1929 – December 6, 2005) was a British electrical engineer and computer pioneer, who helped to design the worlds first transistorized computer.

Early life

Richard Grimsdale was born in Australia, in 1929.
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