• A UNIVAC I at the United States Census Bureau in 1951. UNIVAC I operator's console. UNIVAC I at Franklin Life Insurance Company.
  • They proposed a statistical tabulator to the U.S. Census Bureau in 1946, and in 1951 UNIVAC I passed Census Bureau tests.
  • Without the UNIVAC, the US census calculations would have taken about 10 years making the whole point of conducting a census irrelevant.
  • UNIVAC-1 was developed by the developers of ENIAC in 1951. John Mauchly and J.P. Eakert developed general purpose computer known as UNIVAC-1.
  • On June 14, 1951, UNIVAC I (UNIVersal Automatic Computer I), the world’s first general-purpose electronic digital computer was unveiled. running on a...
  • From the bitsavers.org collection, a scanned-in computer-related document. univac :: univac1 :: UNIVAC1 Operating Manual 1954.
  • The UNIVAC I was the first American computer designed to provide fast execution of relatively simple arithmetic and data transport operations.
    • Is UNIVAC 1 still Operational Today?
    • What made UNIVAC 1 Unique compared to other Early Computers?
    • What was the significance of UNIVAC 1’s prediction of the 1952 Presidential election?
  • ...(180 kW/s) kullanışsız olmasını takip eden bilgisayar gelişim süreci 65 yıl önce ABD’ de nüfus sayımında kullanılan ilk ticari bilgisayarın (UNIVAC-I) üretilmesiyle.