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John Vincent Atanasoff OCM (October 4, 1903 – June 15, 1995) was an American physicist and inventor credited with inventing the first electronic digital computer. [1] Atanasoff invented the first electronic digital computer in the 1930s at Iowa State College (now known as Iowa State University).
In 1988 he wrote a biography of John Vincent Atanasoff, the Iowa State College professor who invented the first electronic digital computer in 1939. Mollenhoff's book gives the Atanasoff perspective of the 1973 federal court decision of Honeywell v. Sperry Rand that ruled the ENIAC computer patent invalid, and drew attention to Atanasoff's work ...
John Vincent Atanasoff, American physicist and one of the inventors of the computer, 1903 - 1995. Kosta Atanasov, a Bulgarian teacher and revolutionary, 1870 - 1912; Krassimir Atanassov (born 1954), Bulgarian mathematician; Manol Atanassov (born 1991), Bulgarian figure skater; Myléna Atanassova (born 1963), Bulgarian fashion designer and painter
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Atanasoff&oldid=528738774"This page was last edited on 19 December 2012, at 03:06
John Vincent Atanasoff (1903–1995), Bulgaria/U.S. – electronic digital computer Marcel Audiffren , France – refrigeration, patent Alexander Anim-Mensah , Ghanaian/American – Chemical engineer, inventor
Nuclear bomb and ballistics simulations at Los Alamos National Laboratory and Ballistic Research Laboratory (BRL), respectively. [1]Monte Carlo simulation (voted one of the top 10 algorithms of the 20th century by Jack Dongarra and Francis Sullivan in the 2000 issue of Computing in Science and Engineering) [2] is invented at Los Alamos National Laboratory by John von Neumann, Stanislaw Ulam ...
Conceived in 1937, the machine was built by Iowa State College mathematics and physics professor John Vincent Atanasoff with the help of graduate student Clifford Berry.It was designed only to solve systems of linear equations and was successfully tested in 1942.
John William Mauchly (/ ˈ m ɔː k l i / MAWK-lee; August 30, 1907 – January 8, 1980) was an American physicist who, along with J. Presper Eckert, designed ENIAC, the first general-purpose electronic digital computer, as well as EDVAC, BINAC and UNIVAC I, the first commercial computer made in the United States.