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In the course of its history, UNIVAC produced a number of separate model ranges. One early UNIVAC line of vacuum tube computers was based on the ERA 1101 and those models built at ERA were rebadged as UNIVAC 110x; despite the 1100 model numbers, they were not related to the latter 1100/2200 series. The 1103A is credited in the literature as the ...
An upgraded 1106 was called the UNIVAC 1100/10. In this new naming convention, the final digit represented the number of CPUs or CAUs in the system, so that, for example, a two-processor 1100/10 system was designated an 1100/12. An upgraded 1108 was called the UNIVAC 1100/20. An upgraded 1110 was released as the UNIVAC 1100/40.
The Bin Qasim Industrial Zone is one of the largest industrial areas in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. It consists of more than 25,000 acres of land in the Port Qasim (Bin Qasim) town area. Contained within this zone are many industrial units, ranging from medium to large in employment volume.
After a meeting in January 1964 with representatives from Univac and the Naval Air Development Center, contracts worth almost $2 million [3] were awarded to Univac Defense Systems Division to engineer, build and test the first digital 30-bit Airborne computer, the CP-823/U (Univac 1830) engineering prototype, for the A-NEW MOD3 test aircraft.
Pages in category "Manufacturing companies based in Karachi" The following 39 pages are in this category, out of 39 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Muhammad Ali Jinnah University, Karachi [89] Habib University, Karachi [90] Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology, Karachi; Bahria University, Islamabad (Karachi Campus) [91] Dawood University of Engineering and Technology, Karachi; Hamdard Institute of Engineering & Technology, Karachi (Hamdard University, Karachi) [92]
The UNIVAC 1103 or ERA 1103, a successor to the UNIVAC 1101, [1] is a computer system designed by Engineering Research Associates and built by the Remington Rand corporation in October 1953. It was the first computer for which Seymour Cray was credited with design work.
The Automated Weather Network The USAF creates a real-time network of UNIVAC 418s; 18-bit Computers - Computer Unit Tester, 1218 (CP-789), AN/UYK-5 Moonbeam, 1219B-CP-848/UYK, CP-914, ILAAS, 1819, AN/UYK-11(V) Article about the Univac 1219 and its use in the Navy's Tartar Missile System; Design of the real-time executive for the Univac 418 system