Information about Manchester Small Scale Experimental Machine

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Replica of the SSEM
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.

The computer was built around a Williams tube, a particular type of cathode ray tube (CRT) which had been developed by Williams at the Telecommunications Research Establishment in July-November 1946, before he joined the University of Manchester in December 1946. Working with Kilburn at the university they increased the storage capacity of the CRT from one bit to 2048 by October 1947 using a 64 by 32 array. This could be used for a computer's memory, with the advantage of allowing random access to memory, rather than the sequential access of the delay line memory units.

The SSEM was a very limited machine, designed to test the Williams tube and other hardware rather than as a practical computer. The SSEM had a single 32 by 32-bit word store, a second CRT to hold a single 32-bit accumulator, and a third CRT to hold the current instruction and its address. A fourth CRT was the output device, displaying the bit pattern of any chosen storage tube. The inputdevice was a set of 32 buttons with manual switches to set the bit pattern of any word.

A whole word was used for any instruction, with bits 0-12 representing the address and bits 13-15 the code defining the function. An instruction was executed in 1.2 milliseconds and the main store was refreshed every sixteen instructions.

It was limited because it could store a total of only 32 numbers and instructions, and the instruction set was very limited. The initial seven instructions were:
  • jump indirect
  • relative jump indirect
  • take a number from memory, negate it, and load it into the accumulator
  • write the number in the accumulator back to memory
  • subtract a value from the accumulator
  • skip next if accumulator is negative
  • stop
A division program was written, using pencil-and-paper method, operating on one bit at a time. It was used to divide 230-1 by 31, giving the answer in about 1.5 seconds. Then this routine was used in a program to show that 314,159,265 and 217,828,183 are relatively prime. Finally, a program was written to find the largest divisor of integers, by testing all numbers from a starting point down as possible divisors, with repeated subtraction used for division. This program was comprised of seventeen instructions and it was written by Kilburn. (A nineteen instruction amended version of it has been published.) It ran successfully on June 21, 1948, first on small integers. Within a few days it was run on 230-1 by trying every number from 218-1 down. It ran for 52 minutes, executing 3.5 million accesses to memory and 2.1 million instructions, and produced the correct answer.

The SSEM developed into the Manchester Mark I, which led to the Ferranti Mark I, the world's second commercially available general-purpose computer. At around the same time EDSAC was being developed at the University of Cambridge Mathematical Laboratory.

A working replica of the SSEM was created in 1998 to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of its first program. This is on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester.

Reference

  • A History of Computing Technology, by Michael A. Williams, IEEE Computer Society Press, 1997.
  • Annals of the History of Computing, Vol 27, No. 3, Jul-Sep 2005, IEEE Computer Society
  • History of Manchester Computers, S.H. Lavington, NCC Publications, Manchester 1975, ISBN 0-85012-155-8

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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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June 21 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

In common years it is always in ISO week 25.
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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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Tom Kilburn (August 11, 1921 - January 17, 2001) was an English engineer. With Freddie Williams he invented the Williams-Kilburn Tube and the first stored-program computer in the world, the Manchester Mark I, while working at the University of Manchester.
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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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Computer data storage, computer memory, and often casually storage or memory refer to computer components, devices and recording media that retain digital data used for computing for some interval of time.
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random access is the ability to access an arbitrary element of a sequence in equal time. The opposite is sequential access, where a remote element takes longer time to access.
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sequential access means that a group of elements (e.g. data in a memory array or a disk file or on a tape) is accessed in a predetermined, ordered sequence. Sequential access is sometimes the only way of accessing the data, for example if it is on a tape.
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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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BIT is an acronym for:
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word" is a term for the natural unit of data used by a particular computer design. A word is simply a fixed-sized group of bits that are handled together by the machine. The number of bits in a word (the word size or word length
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Instructions include:
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In mathematics, the integers a and b are said to be coprime or relatively prime if they have no common factor other than 1 and −1, or equivalently, if their greatest common divisor is 1.
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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".
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The Ferranti Mark I was the second commercially available general-purpose computer (the first one being the German Z4), with the first machine delivered in February 1951, just beating the UNIVAC I.

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Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester, located in Manchester, England, is a large museum devoted to the development of science, technology, and industry and particularly the city's considerable contributions to these.
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