|
|
|||
Melbourne School of Engineering
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
CSIRACIn 1947, Maston Beard and Trevor Pearcey led a research group at the Sydney-based Radiophysics Laboratory of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (now known as CSIRO), to design and build an electronic computer.
The CSIR Mk1 ran its first test programs in late 1949, and it was the fifth electronic stored program computer ever developed. It embodied many features novel at the time and was able to operate more than 1000 times faster than the best mechanical calculators. The machine was officially opened in 1951 and used to solve problems both for the Radiophysics Laboratory and outside organisations. It was decommissioned in 1955 and shipped to Melbourne. On 14 June 1956 the Mk1 was recommissioned and renamed CSIRAC and the new Computation Laboratory at the University of Melbourne was officially opened. CSIRAC was available as a general computing workhorse - from June 1956 to June 1964 over 700 computing projects were processed. In November 1964, Dr. Frank Hirst switched CSIRAC off for the last time and it was donated to the Museum of Victoria. Contents
AcknowledgementsThe CSIRAC pages were originally authored by Steven Pass, then
substantially revised and maintained by David Hornsby. |
|
|
|||||||||||
|
Contact the University : Disclaimer & Copyright : Privacy : Accessibility |
|
Date Created: 04 April 2006 |
The University of Melbourne ABN: 84 002 705 224 |