Powering up a module from the IBM 604: an electronic calculator from 1948
4 hours ago
- #Vacuum Tubes
- #Computing History
- #IBM 604
- The IBM 604 Electronic Calculating Punch, introduced in 1948, was a programmable calculator that used vacuum tubes, making it more powerful than earlier electromechanical equipment.
- It featured pluggable modules, an innovation that simplified maintenance, allowed mass production, and became a key component in IBM's later vacuum-tube computers.
- The 604 used thyratron tubes, which could handle high currents and acted as switches, staying on until power was cut, unlike standard vacuum tubes.
- Despite lacking computer features like loops, memory, and stored programs, the IBM 604 was highly successful, with over 5,600 units produced, and led to IBM's subsequent computer developments.
- The 604 evolved into the Card-Programmed Electronic Calculator and later influenced the IBM 650, which became the most popular computer of the 1950s.