- First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC
The "First Draft of a Report on the
EDVAC " (commonly shortened to "First Draft") was an incomplete 101-page document written byJohn von Neumann and distributed onJune 30 ,1945 byHerman Goldstine , security officer on the classifiedENIAC project. It contains the first published description of the logical design of a computer using the stored-program concept, which has come to be known as thevon Neumann architecture .History
The title page of the report reads:
Quotation|First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC
by John von Neumann,
Contract No. W-670-ORD-4926,
Between the United States Army Ordnance Department
and the University of Pennsylvania Moore School of Electrical Engineering
University of Pennsylvania
June 30, 1945Von Neumann wrote the report by hand while commuting by train to
Los Alamos, New Mexico and mailed the handwritten notes back toPhiladelphia . Goldstine had the report typed and duplicated. While the date on the typed report is June 30, 24 copies of the "First Draft" were distributed to persons closely connected with the EDVAC project five days earlier onJune 25 . Interest in the report caused it to be sent all over the world; Maurice Wilkes ofCambridge University cited his excitement over the report's content as the impetus for his decision to travel to theUnited States for theMoore School Lectures in Summer 1946.Controversy
The treatment of the preliminary report as a publication (in the legal sense) was the source of bitter acrimony between factions of the
EDVAC design team for two reasons. First, publication amounted to a public disclosure that prevented the EDVAC from being patented; second, some on the EDVAC design team contended that the stored-program concept had evolved out of meetings at theUniversity of Pennsylvania 'sMoore School of Electrical Engineering predating von Neumann's activity as a consultant there, and that much of the work represented in the "First Draft" was no more than a translation of the discussed concepts into the language of formallogic in which von Neumann was fluent, hence, failure of von Neumann and Goldstine to list others as authors on the "First Draft" led credit to be attributed to von Neumann alone. (SeeMatthew effect .)References
Bibliography
* cite book
last = Goldstine
first = Herman H.
authorlink = Herman Goldstine
title = The Computer: from Pascal to von Neumann
year = 1972
publisher = Princeton University Press
location = Princeton, New Jersey
id = ISBN 0-691-02367-0* cite book
last = Stern
first = Nancy
title = From ENIAC to UNIVAC, An appraisal of the Eckert-Mauchly Computers
year = 1981
publisher = Digital Press
location = Bedford, Massachusetts
id = ISBN 0-932376-14-2External links
* [http://www.virtualtravelog.net/entries/2003-08-TheFirstDraft.pdf First Draft of a report on the EDVAC] (PDF)
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