Drive, Data

Object number2016.96.13
MediumPlastic; Metal
Credit LineGift of James Sutherland
DescriptionSquare brown plastic magnetic core memory array.DimensionsLength x Width x Depth: 3.25 × 3.25 × 0.625 in. (8.3 × 8.3 × 1.6 cm)
MarksUnderside has inscribed text at top center "4322 027 10541 / 040".
Historical NotesSmall magnetic core memory array. Part of a collection of materials that document the early development of computer technology at Westinghouse where donor James Sutherland was an engineer. Sutherland was a design engineer for computers at Westinghouse in the 1960s. He earned a degree in electrical engineering, served in the United States Air Force, and then began to work for Westinghouse in 1959. He worked in the logic group and designed the Control and Indexing Units for the Westinghouse PRODAC-IV (Programmed Digital Automatic Controller). The computer used NOR logic elements, developed by Westinghouse’s Buffalo plant, to run. With permission Jim took parts of these computers home and eventually built a home computer called ECHO IV (Electronic Home Computing Operator), it is now in The Computer Museum in Boston. ECHO IV was recognized as the first home computer by the Annals of Computing History and The Computer Museum in Boston.
Previous owner
On View
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