IBM NORC

IBM NORC

The IBM Naval Ordnance Research Calculator (NORC) was a one-of-a-kind first-generation (vacuum tube) electronic computer built by IBM for the United States Navy's Bureau of Ordnance. It went into service in December 1954 and was likely the most powerful computer at the time.[1] The Naval Ordnance Research Calculator (NORC), was built at the Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory under the direction of Wallace Eckert.[2]

The computer was presented to the US Navy on December 2, 1954. At the presentation ceremony, it calculated pi to 3089 digits, which was a record at the time. The calculation took only 13 minutes. In 1955 NORC was moved to the Naval Proving Ground at Dahlgren, Virginia. It was their main computer until 1958, when more modern computers were acquired. It continued to be used until 1968. Its design influenced the IBM 701 and subsequent machines in the IBM 700 series of computers.

Asteroid #1625 is named after the NORC, see Meanings of asteroid names (1501-2000).

Contents

Technology

The machine originally used electrostatic tubes (CRT or Williams tube) for memory which stored 2000 words, with an access time of 8 microseconds. Each word consisted of 16 decimal digits, using four bits to represent each digit, plus two modulo-4 error-checking bits. A word could store a 13-digit number with sign and 2-digit index, or one instruction. NORC used four sets of 66 electrostatic tubes in parallel for memory. Each of the tubes in a set of 66 stored one bit of each of 500 words, so each of the four sets of 66 tubes stored 500 words. An upgrade to the addressing circuitry for the Williams tubes allowed memory per tube to be expanded from 500 bits to 900 bits, expanding the total memory to 3600 words without needing to add any more Williams tubes.

At some point the Williams tube memory was replaced with 20,000 words of magnetic core memory, with an access time of 8 microseconds.

The speed of the NORC was 15,000 operations per second. An addition took 15 microseconds, a multiplication took 31 microseconds, and a division took 227 microseconds, not counting memory access time and checking. It had the capacity to do double precision arithmetic, which was used occasionally.

The main hardware consisted of 1982 pluggable units, each of which typically had several vacuum tubes plus supporting electronics. There were 62 types of pluggable units, but half of the circuitry used only six of the types and 80% of the circuitry used only 18 of the types. A total of 9800 vacuum tubes and 10,000 crystal diodes were used.

The NORC had eight magnetic tape units which were similar to the tape drives on the IBM 701 system. The reels were 8 inch diameter and somewhat similar in appearance to a metal 16mm film reel.Unlike the 701 series tape drives, there was no operator control panel on the face of the machine, instead there were buttons placed on the top front of the machines that were used to initiate tape loading, rewinding, unloading, etc. The drives could read or write 71,500 characters per second. It had two printers that could print 150 lines per minute, although only one printer could be used at a time. It also had a card reader which could read 100 cards per minute, with four words stored per card. It also had a display unit which consisted of a CRT tube and a 35mm film camera which photographed the face of the tube and then sent the film through a develop and fix process before it was projected on a rear projection screen approximately 12 frames after the initial exposure. High volume data could also be recorded as text on the film, and employees of the Naval Weapons Laboratory would often work overtime in a darkened room scanning the films for obvious recording failures in critical data.

Footnotes

  1. ^ The NORC was the first supercomputer, states Frank da Cruz (da Cruz 2004).
  2. ^ Lee, J.A.N.. "(column)". IEEE Computer 50th anniversary issue. 

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • NORC — may refer to: NORC, a street view web service and company based in Romania National Opinion Research Center (NORC), at the University of Chicago norC, gene coding for the small subunit of nitric oxide reductase IBM NORC computer Naturally… …   Wikipedia

  • List of IBM products — The following is a list of notable products from the International Business Machines (IBM) Corporation and its predecessor corporations, beginning in the 1890s, and spanning punched card machinery, time clocks, and typewriters, via mainframe… …   Wikipedia

  • The NORC (Asteroid) — Asteroid (1625) The NORC Eigenschaften des Orbits (Simulation) Orbittyp Hauptgürtelasteroid Große Halbachse 3,2016  …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • (1625) The NORC — Asteroid (1625) The NORC Eigenschaften des Orbits (Animation) Orbittyp Hauptgürtelasteroid Große Halbachse 3,2016 AE …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Supercomputer — Der Columbia Supercomputer der NASA mit 20x 512 Intel Itanium 2 Prozessoren …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Palabra (informática) — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Para otros usos de este término, véase Palabra (desambiguación). En el contexto de la informática, una palabra es una cadena finita de bits que son manejados como un conjunto por la máquina. El tamaño o longitud de… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Word (computer architecture) — Processors 1 bit 4 bit 8 bit 12 bit 16 bit 18 bit 24 bit 31 bit 32 bit 36 bit 48 bit 60 bit …   Wikipedia

  • Decimal computer — Decimal computers, computers which have a decimal architecture, represent numbers and/or addresses in decimal, and provide instructions to operate on those numbers and/or addresses directly; examples of encoding used are BCD, Excess 3, two out of …   Wikipedia

  • Liste der Röhrencomputer — Röhrencomputer wurden in der Zeit von den 1940er bis Anfang der 1960er Jahre gebaut und haben heute ausschließlich museale Bedeutung. ENIAC, erster Universalrechner, US Militär, 1947 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • List of vacuum tube computers — This is a list of vacuum tube computers, arranged by date put into service:*Atanasoff–Berry Computer (1942) not Turing complete *Colossus computer (1943) special purpose: cryptanalysis *ENIAC (1946) *IBM SSEC (1948) *IBM 604 (1948) *IBM CPC… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”