When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of UNIVAC products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_UNIVAC_products

    UNIVAC 422 [6] [7] [8] - Univac Digital Trainer, [9] [10] part of the Programmed Educational Package (Prep) [11] UNIVAC 490 – commercial adaptation of AN/USQ real-time system; UNIVAC 492; UNIVAC 494; UNIVAC 494-MAPS – The first Multi-Associated Processor System - not made available commercially; UNIVAC 1103A; UNIVAC 1104; UNIVAC 1105 ...

  3. UNIVAC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNIVAC

    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 ...

  4. AN/UYK-20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AN/UYK-20

    The 9-month course had 4 phases and phase 3 was UYK-20. Phase 3 was broken into the following sections: Microinstructions; Macroinstructions; Processor/Emulator; Memory; Input/Output; Graded Troubleshooting (Mids)- MIDS was the last week of Phase 3 where the class started at 2300 hours and finished at 0630.

  5. CP-823/U - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CP-823/U

    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.

  6. UNIVAC 1100/2200 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNIVAC_1100/2200_series

    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.

  7. UNIVAC III - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNIVAC_III

    The UNIVAC III, designed as an improved transistorized replacement for the vacuum tube UNIVAC I and UNIVAC II computers. The project was started by the Philadelphia division of Remington Rand UNIVAC in 1958 [1] with the initial announcement of the system been made in the Spring of 1960, [1] however as this division was heavily focused on the UNIVAC LARC project the shipment of the system was ...

  8. Vacuum-tube computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum-tube_computer

    UNIVAC II: 1958 An improved, fully compatible version of the UNIVAC I. UNIVAC 1105: 1958 3: A follow-up to the UNIVAC 1103 scientific computer. AN/FSQ-7: 1958 52: Largest vacuum tube computer ever built. 52 were built for U.S Project SAGE. ZEBRA: 1958 55: Designed in Holland and built by Britain's Standard Telephones and Cables. [17] Burroughs ...

  9. UNIVAC 1103 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNIVAC_1103

    The UNIVAC 1103A or Univac Scientific is an upgraded version introduced in March 1956. [8] [9] [1] [page needed] Significant new features on the 1103A were its magnetic-core memory and the addition of interrupts to the processor. [10] The UNIVAC 1103A had up to 12,288 words of 36-bit magnetic core memory, in one to three banks of 4,096 words each.