- SWAC (computer)
The SWAC (Standards Western Automatic Computer) was an early electronic digital
computer built in1950 by the U.S. National Bureau of Standards (NBS) in Los Angeles, California. It was designed byHarry Huskey . Like the SEAC, built about the same time, the SWAC was a small-scale interim computer designed to be built quickly and put into operation while the NBS waited for more powerful computers to be completed (in particular, theRAYDAC byRaytheon ).The machine used 2300
vacuum tube s. It had 256 words of memory, usingWilliams tube s ( [http://infolab.stanford.edu/pub/voy/museum/pictures/display/2-1.htm#tube picture] ), with each word being 37bit s. It had only seven basic operations: add, subtract, and multiply (single precision anddouble precision versions); comparison, data extraction,input , andoutput .When the SWAC was completed in July 1950, it was the fastest computer in the world. It continued to hold that status until the IAS computer was completed a year later. It could add two numbers and store the result in 64
microseconds . A similar multiplication took 384 microseconds. It was used by the NBS until1954 until the Los Angeles office was closed, and then by UCLA until1967 (with modifications). It was charged out there for $40.-/hour.In
1952 ,Raphael M. Robinson used the SWAC to discover fiveMersenne prime s—the largest prime numbers known at the time, with 157, 183, 386, 664, and 687 digits.References
* Williams, Michael R. (
1997 ). "A History of Computing Technology".IEEE Computer Society .External links
[http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel4/85/12737/00586073.pdf IEEE Transcript: SWAC—Standards Western Automatic Computer: The Pioneer Day Session at NCC July 1978]
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