1951 UNIVAC 1 Computer Basic System Components First Mass Produced Computer in U.S.
If you enjoy our videos, PLEASE HELP US Preserve Technology History with a small contribution to our channel: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted... Your contribution greatly helps! Thank you! ~ CHAP. -- We created this explanatory, educational overview of the 1951 UNIVAC 1 to show in more detail many of its basic components. Intro segment includes higher quality images than are contained in the original 1953 film. The 1953 film begins at index 5:52, followed by brief photo gallery. UNIVAC was the first mass produced business computer in the U.S., and opened the door to a successful line of commercial computing machines. The historical data in the film is well worth preserving and the introductory images may help add some clarity. Compilation by the Computer History Archives Project. A large number of dedicated individuals have done a great deal to preserve the history of these early machines and those that followed. For more information, please visit some of the following excellent resources. Sincere thanks to the following individuals and organizations. Tony Buglione, Manager Ext. Communications, Media Relations, UNISYS “Large Scale Scientific Computing at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,” (George Michael & others); Sam Coleman & others http://www.computer-history.info/ Alan Reiter’s UNIVAC history http://univac1.0catch.com/ Al Kossow’s Online Software Archive http://www.Bitsavers.org VIPClubMN.org, (former employees of Unisys & predecessor companies), Lowell A. Benson, director/editor; Harvey Taipale, President; Ronald Smith, Historian, http://www.VIPClubMN.org and UNIVAC articles at http://vipclubmn.org/BlueBell.html Ed Thelen, Computer Historian http://ed-thelen.org/comp-hist/ The Computer History Museum, Mountainview, CA http://www.computerhistory.org Southwest Museum of Engineering, Communications & Computation (SMECC), Ed Sharpe Archivist , http://www.smecc.org/ National Aeronautics and Space Administration (“NASA”) archives Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (“LLNL”) YouTube film Index: 0:06 Dedication 0:10 Prologue, Introduction 01:32 Introduction - Remington-Rand 02:15 Narration & Images – Supervisory Control Unit, Oscilloscope, Central Processing Unit, Uniservo, Unityper, Uniprinter, Mercury Delay Line Memory, Vacuum tube circuits, Card-to-Tape Unit, High Speed Printer 05:47 Acknowledgments & Resources 05:52 Original Remington Rand Film 1953 23:25 Photo Gallery & Resources 24:26 Copyright Notice 24:29 Acknowledgements 24:41 Deleted Scene Click on the link below to see more Computer History Videos: / @computerhistoryarchivesproject Compilation (C) 2018 - CHAP Original (1950's) UNIVAC material copyright by Unisys

Vintage Computer History: Ken Olsen and Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) (PDP, VAX)

Once You Understand it, You Will Think Everything Else is Silly - Toyota E-CVT

Top Secret Computers, Engineering Research Associates ERA 1101 UNIVAC Cryptology 1946 Rand NSA CIA

1986: Email - the Perfect Tech for the Jet Set? | Micro Live | BBC Archive

Heavy Duty Computing: Univac 1219 In Action

1963 Timesharing: A Solution to Computer Bottlenecks

Running Microsoft's first product on the Altair 8800, from paper tape

Light Years Ahead | The 1969 Apollo Guidance Computer

From Raw Crystal to Crystal Oscillator - Crystals go to War in 1943

How I Made A C64 Laptop From Scratch - The Portable 64 (Emulation)

The history of the PC: From 8bit to 64bit and everything in-between.

REMINGTON RAND UNIVAC INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL COMPUTERS 1960s MAINFRAME COMPUTING FILM 64454

Exposing The Solid State Donut Battery. It's Over.

Restoring the Apollo comms system: Marc Verdiell - (Curious Marc)

1979: Will WORD PROCESSORS start a HOME WORKING revolution? | Past Predictions | BBC Archive

IBM System/360 Front Panel

How the EDSAC computer changed science in the 1940s and 50s

The Computer Chronicles - Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC) (1986)

UNIVAC Computer History: Twin Cities Factory Tour restored 1968 film mainframe "Electronic Servants"

