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  2. Colossus computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus_computer

    Colossus is thus regarded [2] as the world's first programmable, electronic, digital computer, although it was programmed by switches and plugs and not by a stored program. [ 3 ] Colossus was designed by General Post Office (GPO) research telephone engineer Tommy Flowers [ 1 ] based on plans developed by mathematician Max Newman at the ...

  3. Tommy Flowers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_Flowers

    Thomas Harold Flowers MBE (22 December 1905 – 28 October 1998) was an English engineer with the British General Post Office. During World War II, Flowers designed and built Colossus, the world's first programmable electronic computer, to help decipher encrypted German messages.

  4. Max Newman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Newman

    Maxwell Herman Alexander Newman, FRS [1] (7 February 1897 – 22 February 1984), generally known as Max Newman, was a British mathematician and codebreaker.His work in World War II led to the construction of Colossus, [6] the world's first operational, programmable electronic computer, and he established the Royal Society Computing Machine Laboratory at the University of Manchester, which ...

  5. Alan Turing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing

    He also introduced the Tunny team to Tommy Flowers who, under the guidance of Max Newman, went on to build the Colossus computer, the world's first programmable digital electronic computer, which replaced a simpler prior machine (the Heath Robinson), and whose superior speed allowed the statistical decryption techniques to be applied usefully ...

  6. List of pioneers in computer science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pioneers_in...

    Built from vacuum tubes, their concept was essential for the success of the Colossus codebreaking computer. 1943, 1951 Eckert, J. Presper: With John Mauchly, designed and built ENIAC, the first modern (all electronic, Turing-complete) computer; and UNIVAC I, the first commercially available computer 1981 Emerson, E. Allen

  7. DeepSeek caused a $600 billion freakout. But China’s AI ...

    www.aol.com/finance/deepseek-caused-600-billion...

    Jevons Paradox and 'test time compute' mean the need for advanced computer chips may soar, not plummet. ... called Colossus, in Tennessee, that has 100,000 of Nvidia’s more advanced H100 GPUs ...

  8. This weekend, the @xAI team brought our Colossus 100k H100 training cluster online. From start to finish, it was done in 122 days. Colossus is the most powerful AI training system in the world ...

  9. Z3 (computer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z3_(computer)

    An analog computer was built by the rocket scientist Helmut Hölzer in 1942 at the Peenemünde Army Research Center to simulate [30] [31] [32] V-2 rocket trajectories. [33] [34] The Colossus (1943), [35] [36] built by Tommy Flowers, and the Atanasoff–Berry computer (1942) used thermionic valves (vacuum tubes) and binary representation of ...