back to article Behold ATLAS, the fastest computer of 50 years ago

Think today's computing industry moves fast? Try that of decades past. Moore's Law predicts that processor power will double every couple of years or so, but on December 7, 1962, the scientific computing power of the entire UK is said to have doubled in a single day. That was the day they switched on the original Ferranti …

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  1. Big-nosed Pengie
    Headmaster

    Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

    "Compute" is a verb. The word you're looking for is "computer", which is a noun.

    You're welcome.

    1. John 48

      Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

      Compute time != computer time. ATLAS was a multi tasking system, so in modern parlance the CPU time spent solving your pet problem (i.e. the "compute" time) would not be the same as the amount of elapsed time the computer spent running your program. Or in other words, even if it took an hour to run a program to completion, it may have only actually applied 5 minutes of actual compute time to it during that period.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

      Surely time is a noun. Wouldn't that make compute an adjective? More specifically, since it is based on a verb, a participle adjective?

      You're welcome.

      1. Big-nosed Pengie

        Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

        "Surely time is a noun. Wouldn't that make compute an adjective? More specifically, since it is based on a verb, a participle adjective?"

        It's a noun used as an adjective.

        1. frank ly

          Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

          Use of a verb form (a participle) as an adjective requires the present or past participle of the verb. So, this would require 'computing time' or 'computed time'. (cf. 'baking apple' and 'baked apple', but _not_ 'bake apple')

          If you want to use the noun as an adjective (cf. 'apple pie', 'car park') then you'd need to say 'computer time'.

          Using the bare verb form, 'compute time', is the equivalent of saying "Don't talk now, it's not talk time, it's eat time." It looks and sounds clumsy and ugly. However, language changes fastly in this modern world and I look forward to more of these disruptive read experiences.

          1. Great Bu

            Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

            mmmmmmm.....eat time.

      2. itzman

        Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

        The word you want is computation

    3. harmjschoonhoven
      FAIL

      Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

      "The word you're looking for is "computer", which is a noun."

      In the pre-electronic time a "computer" was a lady with a quill pen. At Harvard College Observatory they ware paid $0.25 to $0.35 per hour in the 1920s.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

        > In the pre-electronic time a "computer" was a lady with a quill pen. At Harvard College Observatory they ware paid $0.25 to $0.35 per hour in the 1920s.

        Since we all seem to be trying to out-pedant one another, may I just add that quill pens were replaced with steel nibs long before the 1920s? They may still have been dipped in ink, but no geese were plucked in the making of them.

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

      Or perhaps "computing" - also acceptable as a noun.

      I'm finding it difficult to comprehend how the author can have got something so obvious so horribly wrong.

      1. diodesign (Written by Reg staff) Silver badge

        Re: Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

        "I'm finding it difficult to comprehend how the author can have got something so obvious so horribly wrong."

        Don't worry, the beatings will continue until morale improves.

        C.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

          We routinely refer to "compute time", which is how many CPU-seconds are used across all processors, vs clock time or the computation time of one cpu.

          Pedantry would result in the language police renaming disk drives, without thinking about the actual history of the word.

          Computers compute, no matter if human or machine.

        2. Red Bren
          Coat

          Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

          Are you going to beat the impiety out of us or beat the happiness into us?

        3. Norman Hartnell
          Headmaster

          Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

          "Don't worry, the beatings will continue until moral improves."

          I think you meant "morale"...unless that was deliberate and I missed it.

    5. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

      Syntax Error !

      1. Esskay
        Joke

        Well thank fuck someone cleared that up

        I can finally get on with my life - after all, this air traffic won't control itself

    6. Richard 31
      Paris Hilton

      Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

      I like to note that people here have probably used more processing power than the Atlas was capable of over its lifetime to argue the toss over an irrelevant piece of grammar.

      Welcome to the internet. :)

    7. A J Stiles
      Meh

      Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

      Sounds like a case of US English vs Proper English.

      In the Queen's English, compound nouns are formed from participles of verbs and genitive cases of nouns. Also (not directly relevant here), collective nouns are generally treated as plural. In the strange dialect picked up by the descendants of those who forgot to pack a dictionary when the Mayflower sailed from Plymouth , compound nouns are formed from infinitives of verbs and accusative cases of nouns -- and collective nouns are always treated as singular.

      So whilst we would say "computing time", Americans might well say "compute time". Compare also "The girls' swimming team have chosen their new mascot" vs. "The girl swim team has chosen its new mascot".

      1. John 62
        Headmaster

        Re: Compute time was billed at around £750-800 per hour

        I speak as a native Brit. I understand that collective nouns can make sense as plurals, but I prefer to treat them as singular when I can, because a group of something is a singular thing and singular things take singular verbs.

        And no, the Americans don't get everything right, but they did not forget to pack a dictionary because the Mayflower sailed before Johnson wrote it (and the people who sailed on the Mayflower were all subjects of the British Monarch and largely expected to remain so). What actually happened was that the language changed in different ways on either side of the water. US English is closer to British English than some English dialects, particularly Scots (and Doric along with Ulster Scots/Ullans). Patrick Stewart could talk Yorkshire to you and you wouldn't have a clue what he was saying unless you were from near the village he grew up in.

        And at one time, the English who had emigrated to plantation-era Ireland believed the English in England were letting English go to the dogs and that they were speaking a truer form.

  2. Turtle

    All together now!

    "Think today's computing industry moves fast? Try that of decades past. Moore's Law predicts that processor power will double every couple of years or so, but on December 7, 1962, the scientific computing power of the entire UK is said to have doubled in a single day..That was the day they switched on the original Ferranti Atlas."

    C'mon! All together now! Let me hear you!

    "But could it run Crysis?"

    1. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge
      Happy

      Re: All together now!

      Most likely: no, but it might have played pong by tele-type

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    What are the specs?

    "December 7, 1962 .. was the day they switched on the original Ferranti Atlas, the UK's first supercomputer .. The Atlas delivered nearly a hundred-fold advance in processing power over previous computers and it brought many innovations, including virtual memory and a multitasking operating system" ...

    What are the specs in modern day parlance?

    1. Adam 1

      Re: What are the specs?

      In beardseconds please.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: What are the specs?

        Preferably how many ips/tips/hips or kips, since beardseconds are inherently variable. Especially female beardseconds, which are difficult to measure.

    2. Chris Miller

      Re: What are the specs?

      From the Wikipedia article linked below, a floating point multiply took 5μs - so (very roughly) 0.2Mflops.

      1. Chris Miller

        PS

        The current fastest computer (Titan - also the name of the Atlas 2 prototype) has 20Pflops and cost $100 million (roughly equivalent in modern terms). So a 10^11 improvement in 50 years, or doubling every 16 months - someone should turn that into a law, or something.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: What are the specs?

      Unless you understand mainframe architecture the specs won't really make sense compared to a desktop machine.

    4. David Given
      Thumb Up

      Re: What are the specs?

      Actually quite substantial, according to the wikipedia page. It had 48 bit words, with 16kw of RAM and 96kw of drum storage --- that's 96kB and 576kB --- mapped into a 24-bit virtual address space, and what looked like paging between drum and core so that applications could use the full address space. It had an MMU, full interrupt systems and was asynchronously clocked (something that's still not done much today). Performance seems to have been about 500000 flops.

      The washing machine comment is a bit harsh: this is way more powerful than the kind of embedded PIC you find in that sort of thing, and even beats a lot of 8-bit microcontrollers of today. I think it's roughly equivalent to about the 16-bit microcontroller class, although you'll need to find one with an FPU.

      Does anyone have a reference to the instruction set?

      1. harmjschoonhoven
        Happy

        Re: What are the specs?

        The instruction set can be found here:

        http://www.cs.ucf.edu/courses/cda5106/summer03/papers/mark1.atlas.1.pdf

        1. David Given
          Go

          Re: What are the specs?

          Hey! An emulator!

          http://www.dikleatherdale.webspace.virginmedia.com/atlashelpfiles/atlasemulatorhelpfrontpage.html

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Familiar words

    "When we had finished commissioning, we eventually got to a point where the machine would run for ten minutes without fail, and at that point we all cheered and went to the pub to celebrate surviving ten minutes,"

    Wind the clock forward 20-ish years and I could have said the same, only it was the software not falling over that we celebrated.

    RIP Ferranti.

  5. Yes Me Silver badge
    Happy

    Surely I am not the only...

    Surely I am not the only person here who actually used that machine? It rocked, until the day its console caught fire and we had to send our jobs to the Harwell Atlas while they rebuilt it.

    For performance numbers see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_Computer_%28Manchester%29#Hardware

    1. nuked
      Trollface

      Re: Surely I am not the only...

      The chick who's standing up - do you have her number?

      1. Andus McCoatover
        Windows

        Re: Surely I am not the only...

        Phone number, or the seial number of her Zimmer frame?

        1. nuked

          Re: Surely I am not the only...

          Phone number

    2. keithpeter Silver badge

      Who was using it as late as 1976? Re: Surely I am not the only...

      Who carried on using these things until 1976? Amazing.

    3. Dick Pountain

      Re: Surely I am not the only...

      No you're not the only one - I used London University's Atlas around 1967 when doing post-grad biochemistry, to process readings from a scintillation counter. A lab assistant in a brown coat would take my printouts away, and 3 or 4 days later bring back another pile of fan-fold with the results. Then I'd sit down with a clockwork desk calculator to finish the job.

    4. Dani Eder

      Re: Surely I am not the only...

      Now I understand the origin of the HCF assembler command (Halt and Catch Fire). Thank you.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Surely I am not the only...

        Early masks of the Motorola 68000CPU had this bug as I recall. There was an opcode that caused one set of data bus buffers to turn on all 1s, and another to turn on all zeroes. The result was a deeply satisfying but expensive crack and a smell of frying epoxy, in the commercial version. The ceramic clad version just sat there and got hot till the wires fell off the leadframe.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Surely I am not the only...

        "Now I understand the origin of the HCF assembler command (Halt and Catch Fire)."

        The ICL 2903 had a built-in card reader that was totally controlled by software. It was possible to get the microcode timing sequence wrong - and effectively issue a command to the picker solenoid of "select, hold, and catch fire".

  6. Yes Me Silver badge
    Headmaster

    P.S.

    "Each of the three Atlas machines". A bit unfair, because three Atlas II machines were also built.

  7. David 45

    Speaking of old computers....

    This also might be of interest:

    http://ict1301.co.uk/1301ccsx.htm

    http://www.kentonline.co.uk/kentonline/news/2012/october/23/flossie_the_computer.aspx

    The owner of the farm where Flossie is housed has, unfortunately had to sell the property (the original Darling Buds Of May series location) and a new owner is in the offing, so the future of the machine is uncertain. Flossie is normally on demonstration on the same day as an annual charity classic car show at the farm that I am involved with (slightly off-topic, I know!), so the whole event may be in jeopardy.

    1. Anonymous John

      Re: Speaking of old computers....

      http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/10/23/flossie_at_risk/

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Soot?

    I wonder which management genius thought it would be a good idea to build a precision machine in a locomotive factory?

    Hard to remember how good Britain used to be at this sort of thing. Not just Atlas but the monster transistor computers built by the University of Manchester.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Soot?

      Britain is still very good at this sort of thing. Both building precision stuff and crap middle management.

      Can't think of any washing machines off the top of my head that sport a miltitasking OS, unless they happened to be Internet connected or something. Even then a proper MMU and an FPU would be pretty redundant.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Soot?

        Why middle management? It's the people on over £200k a year that seem to have undefinable jobs in failing organisations.

        You'd almost think if we got in some Japanese or European mainland management for a British workforce we could turn out world class stuff.

        Oh wait, we do.

      2. Jan 0 Silver badge

        Re: Soot? @AC 8th December 17:18

        IIRC, back in the 90s, Philips washing machines used out of spec. SPARC Motherboards.

        I have no idea what OS they ran, but Solaris would make sense.

        Multitasking may be overkill, but I'd certainly like a washing machine that I could program myself. E.g. to overcome bulletproof Zanussi's inability to rinse satisfactorily.

  9. Wanda Lust
    Headmaster

    West Gorton

    the manufacturing site mentioned in the video for Atlas, during its later days through ICL & Fujitsu Services, had an informative mural on a corridor showing the evolution of the UK computer industry including Atlas. I think the tower at West Gorton might be gone now as it was shedding lumps from on high when I was last there.

  10. Andus McCoatover
    Windows

    Wonder if I actually used it??

    Years ago (mid-70's) we had to write programs - FORTRAN, I think - only 5 lines or so - to teach us computing. (Or was it Basic?) We only had one mechanical tty to use.

    This was at Coventry Technical College, and I seem to remember the instructor telling us a) the machine was at Manchester, and b) it was frightenly expensive to use - we only had a couple of minutes or so per student. He'd vet our paper-written programs first, and made us practice keyboard skills from a sheet of copied paper (the copier, IIRC, was based on methylated spirits, and used a drum) so we didn't waste time on "hunt 'n' peck" typing.

    In the days when my then-girlfriend was using punched cards, which sometimes she'd bring a stack home so I could help her debug - and her engineer fell about laughing when I told him "Half a byte is called a nibble" - which it is!

    Yoof of today don't know they've been born. Luxury (etc.)

    1. Phil O'Sophical Silver badge
      Happy

      Re: Wonder if I actually used it??

      > the copier, IIRC, was based on methylated spirits

      Ah, Roneo machines.we used to do our school newsletter on them, I still remember the smell.

      1. Destroy All Monsters Silver badge
        Pirate

        Re: Wonder if I actually used it??

        > I still remember the smell.

        Don't remind me. And there were large pirate symbols on the orange bottles. I somehow don't think you could use these in classrooms today without looking at jailtime.

    2. Ian Johnston Silver badge
      Thumb Up

      Re: Wonder if I actually used it??

      Banda duplicators, eh? That takes me back.

      1. Dave 126 Silver badge

        Re: Wonder if I actually used it??

        In an effort to learn about these Banda duplicators of which you speak, I tripped over this gem:

        "In grade five at Tyler Street primary school, Preston, my first newspaper, The Weekly Trumpet, was hand lettered on quarto paper and pinned to the class notice board. About this time my mother bought her first washing machine, a Hoover with a fold-away hand-wringer. "What a perfect way to run off a few copies of the Trumpet and sell them to the kids" I thought! But something went terribly wrong. Instead of the violet hectograph-inked paper-master soaked in methylated spirits transferring onto white paper, it ended up on the wringers of mother's new pride and joy! The Weekly Trumpet appeared on whites and coloureds for weeks until the image disappeared."

        -http://www.metaltype.co.uk/stories/story38.shtml

        The author continues to describe his career in printing, from 1949 to present... a parallel story of business and information technology.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Wonder if I actually used it??

      I managed to get a CSE in Computer Studies in 1973, given this I must have been using an interesting computer in 1971/2/3 (any ideas?) which was based in Chelmsford. Initially we programmed in 'City and Guilds' which was assembler like - we used to 'pencil in' cards (punched card sized) and send them off to get the output a week later - used to get massive stacks of expensive printouts with one character on each sheet! We then upgraded to Fortran and punched cards - the punching device was manual, but far faster to 'write' than having to 'colour in' (with a 2B pencil) the fields on a card! Those were the days ....

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Altas 2

    I wasn't quite around for Atlas 1, still an undergrad, but I do remember going up to the CAD centre, really as a jolly, with my boss who had some problem with a plotter interface he'd designed for the Atlas 2 there. Hope you are well Bill...

    1. circusmole
      Happy

      Re: Altas 2

      I was working on Atlas II at the Cambridge CAD Centre until I left in 1974. I may have even bumped into you :-)

      Pre-pulses - those were the days!

      1. Stuart 22

        Re: Altas 2

        Yep I remember the CADC Atlas. It was still there in the late seventies. It looked just like the computer used in A for Andromeda or is my memory fading? Of course it was a bit nouveau for those of us who started life on an English Electric Deuce ...

        1. circusmole
          Meh

          Re: Altas 2

          What nobody mentions is the size of the support utility room. It was as big as the computer room and crammed with motor-alternators, vacuum pumps, pressure pumps and a water chiller. What a nightmare.

          1. Alan Brown Silver badge

            Re: Altas 2

            Have you seen the size of the support equipment for any modern small datacentre? While usually scattered in a few locations it easily adds up to the same amount of floorspace.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Altas 2

          The valve Deuce at English Electric Computers Kidsgrove with its mercury delay line storage was still doing the company payroll in 1966/7. The bureau department had a KDF8 (RCA501) for customer payrolls and share registration - as well as an EE designed KDF9 for Rolls Royce turbine blade design.

          To which was added the state of the art RCA Spectra 70/25 and the big Spectra 70/45 (System 4-50) with 128KB memory. The prototype in-house EE and Leo designed System 4/70 had a massive 1MB of memory. The Marconi designed System 4-30 was different hardware again with pretty neon indicators. There were also the industrial computers like KDF7 which could keep running off an enormous Ni-Cd battery - and the KDN2 (analogue?). The Elliot industrial "March" series computers were also being developed for system control - as were the Marconi "Myriad" ones for air traffic control.

          These were all overlapping products on the same site - Leo 3s were still being produced elsewhere. The merger with ICT to form ICL in 1969 added yet more computers from their acquisitions and mergers forming their 1900 range. The company name seemed to change monthly as new acquisitions and mergers happened - life was fun.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Atlas 2

            And down in the basement at Kidsgrove was the 70/15 we used for developing bits. We could get pretty fast at hand bootstrapping the system via the console buttons, As could everyone in the industry I suspect, in those golden days.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: Atlas 2

              "We could get pretty fast at hand bootstrapping the system via the console buttons, "

              The Spectra switches were just round chrome push buttons in illuminated squares? Those machines quickly lost their silver Spectra logo to souvenir hunters as the rainbow diffraction effect was quite novel.

              The System 4-7x engineer's panel had 64 address/data switches which were protruding toggles. Used to get calluses on the top of my index finger from doing a fast ripple reset of them all between each write or read. Only the KDF8 in a darkened room had the very large console of flashing coloured lights that visitors expected of a computer in the 1960s.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: Atlas 2

                Yes round chrome ones. The ones we used for System 4 were GPO specced switches, with multiple permutations of contacts and locking/ non locking variants, They were very nice, I still have some sitting in a drawer somewhere, and you could really zap along a row, as you say.

  12. Ian Yates
    Thumb Up

    Google

    Think what you like about their business practices, but I have a lot of respect for the work Google put in to preserving and celebrating historical technical and scientific achievements.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Google

      Google's core idea seems to be to get rich by indexing and making available all the world's information. Their preservation work is surely just part of it.

      Whether it is a good idea or not will probably be discussed by future historians, but I have to say that Google frightens me a lot less than Facebook.

  13. Paddy
    Pint

    Gangsta stylee

    I needed to try out a site that promised a gangsta-stylke translation of a page so ... http://www.gizoogle.net/tranzizzle.php?search=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.theregister.co.uk%2F2012%2F12%2F08%2Fferranti_atlas_50th_birthday%2F&se=Go+Git+Dis+Shiznit

  14. DaveB
    Facepalm

    Atlas Virtual memory never catch on

    I joined the University of London Computer Centre (ULCC) in about 1972, which had moved on from Atlas to Control Data 6400, 6600 and 7600. Most of the people I worked with had worked on Atlas.

    I understand that many of the patents from Atlas passed eventually to ICL, who let the Atlas patent laps on Virtual memory, after all with machine memory then getting as big as 32K, why would you need it.

    In 1978 the VAX 11/780 with a massive 128K of memory supporting 12 interactive users re-introduced us to Virtual Paged memory, and I suspect never paid a dollar in royalties for Virtual Memory usage.

    1. Spoonsinger

      and and and.....

      they did rounded corners first.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: and and and.....

        When I was working in industrial automation big tin, our shopfloor cabinets all had rounded corners for safely and forklift damage reduction. It hurts a lot less if a machine operator bangs his head on a rounded corner that a square one.

        Really, the USPTO should have been paying attention that day. A rounded corner is not a design feature, it is a functional feature and as such cannot be patented due to prior art.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Atlas Virtual memory never catch on

      Surely the DEC PDP11/70 running RSX-11M/RSX-11D had virtual memory and it paged?

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Atlas Virtual memory never catch on

      The ICL System 4/75 had virtual memory with paging in 1968 - on a real memory of 1MB. The bureau subsidiary BARIC had one at Winsford. It ran the Interact-75 TP service on the custom SGOS system overlaid onto the 7J O/S. It had a March 2140 comms frontend handling customer teletype connections - including some new fast Termiprinters at 300bps. The replaceable disk drives were 8MB - and there was a fixed CDC disk with the massive capacity of 600MB. The latter weighed one and a half tonnes and had water cooled bearings.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Atlas Virtual memory never catch on

        The device that most fascinated me at Kidsgrove, I think made by CDC, was the glass sided box that threw large flexible magnetic cards round a drum, and then usually put them away again...

    4. hayseed

      Re: Atlas Virtual memory never catch on

      The IBM 360 used virtual memory, was a time-sharing system, and did dynamic-address translation.

      see:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michigan_Terminal_System

      1. PhilBuk
        Thumb Up

        Re: Atlas Virtual memory never catch on

        Agreed - it was IBM that did the 'Look! Virtual Memory, aren't we clever trick!" with the 360 series. VAX was a much later entry into the market.

        The PDP 11/70 didn't really do true virtual memory - it just used a form of extended address paging.

        Phil.

    5. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Atlas Virtual memory never catch on

      No, I don't think we let the patents lapse. What we did have though, for some reason which has always escaped me, was a patent pool with other computer firms. Including a foreign one with Big Blue boxes.

      A few years later I recall conversations with an excellent product manager called Roger, in Intergalactic Headquarters: 'you mean we just have to lie down and get f***ked?'.

      Everyone was scared of anti-trust suits...

  15. AD
    Meh

    Not invented here?

    The entire El Reg article manages to avoid mentioning the University of Manchester - yet we do get "assembling the second Atlas at the University of London took six months". Funny dat.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Not invented here?

      I do remember hopping up and down to West Gorton a lot when the MU5 was there. Great Expenses!

      I'm sure everyone knows the University's important contributions. But maybe Google will do more videos before we all pop off. (OT but RIP Patrick Moore)

  16. Dick Head

    Visiting the punch room.

    That was an experience which would make your day. Junior programmers in the 1960s were not encouraged to just drop into this paradise where dozens of nubile young ladies were typing away on their IBM 029s.

    But sometimes you would be invited down by the woman of formidable aspect who guarded access to the room to clarify something you had written on one of your coding forms. Oh joy!

    She was no fool, however. She noticed that my handwriting was steadily getting worse and after the third visit told me that I was disrupting their workflow and that in future the coding forms would be sent back and I would lose my place in the queue.

    Another thing from the video: whatever happened to Stentophones? We used to have them everywhere in 1969 but I don't think I've seen one in 20 years.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Visiting the punch room.

      The EELM Kidsgrove punchroom was like running the gauntlet for any young lad. The object of the exercise seemed to be cause as much blushing as possible. When a new girl joined the punch room she would be brought to the viewing window of the bureau computer room. She would then be told the marital status etc of the male operators so she could take her pick of one that took her fancy.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Visiting the punch room.

        When I was in the 5th form my father wangled me a summer job with his company's computer department. There was a woman programmer. Who was rather attractive. And she talked to me in a friendly fashion. I am afraid I got completely the wrong idea about the computer industry. But at least I knew at an early age who Rear Admiral Grace Hopper was, even if I made a completely incorrect correlation between a knowledge of Boolean algebra and getting on with the opposite sex.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Visiting the punch room.

          " I am afraid I got completely the wrong idea about the computer industry. "

          Hmm - in the 1960s there were probably as many women as men in programming departments. As a junior programmer I shared an office with four older women who delighted in causing me to blush. That was the era of mini, or rather micro, skirts. The question crosses my mind as to why they had to store their card boxes on top of the cupboard opposite my desk - they could only reach them by standing on tip-toe.

          In the 1960s women computer operators were only allowed to work the day and evening shifts. However women programmers were allowed to supervise their work being run even in the middle of the night. During the night shift most of the computer room lights were switched off - giving a more restful atmosphere. The stories about what went on behind the tape decks on the night shift are best left to the imagination.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Visiting the punch room.

            That is interesting. In fact my career path took a different turn after A levels and I only got back to computers in my late 20s when the research I was doing needed a lot of data collection and one thing led to another. By then, at least in industry, it was an almost all-male occupation.

            This, though, seems to be usually the way. When a job becomes seen as attractive and high paid, whoever was doing it tends to get muscled out by middle and upper class men. When the Navy become glamorous, all of a sudden the aristocracy wanted their kids to have naval rather than army careers and the "tarpaulin" officers were pushed out. When it was realised how much could be made from sheep, younger sons were pushed off to the former prison of Australia. And, seemingly, when computation (a job largely done by women) turned into computing and programmers and analysts started to earn reasonable amounts of money, suddenly it was men doing it.

            [sigh]

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Visiting the punch room.

      The EELM punchroom managed to upset the new compiler testing one day. A batch of faulty program sources had been submitted for punching. The object was to test the compilers handling of syntax errors. Next day the run arrived back with clean compilations - the punchroom had corrected all the obvious errors as they punched the cards.

    3. Michael Dunn
      Happy

      Re: Visiting the punch room.

      "But sometimes you would be invited down by the woman of formidable aspect who guarded access to the room to clarify something you had written on one of your coding forms. Oh joy!"

      Shade of Michael Dobbs' Dragonaria! (in Goodfellowe MP)

  17. David Woodhead

    Jeff Rohl

    When I studied Computation at UMIST in the mid 70s (University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, now sadly subsumed into the University of Manchester), I had the privilege of being taught by Jeff Rohl, one of the creators of Atlas Autocode - a kind of souped-up Algol specifically created for the Atlas.

    I don't think that I ever worked directly on the Atlas - by that time UMRCC was primarily using ICL 1900s and its CDC 7600 and 6000 for university support services. I remember using teletype access to the CDC 6000 to develop a Pascal program to give you optimal strategies when playing blackjack, although needless to say this wasn't part of my course or even my final year project.

    Anyway: Jeff Rohl was one of the finest teachers I ever encountered in my life. Soon after I left UMIST he returned to teach in his native Australia (Adelaide I believe), and I hope he achieved his ambition of conducting a Beethoven chorale performed by a top choir and orchestra. The one thing he taught me above all else, despite being a firm advocate of formally well designed and structured programming techniques was: if your program doesn't do what is set out in its specification then it's worthless, regardless of how well structured it may be. This was a most enlightened view from an academic, but served me well throughout my career.

    Don't know if you're still with us Jeff, but thank you anyway.

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    An ICL Anthology

    In 1996 Hamish Carmichael published "An ICL Anthology". It contained anecdotes from the ICL workforce that spanned right back to the early days of tabulators. The stories covered many of the companies that eventually formed ICL from English Electric Computers and ICT. There were eventually two volumes and they used to be online - but apparently no longer. Surprisingly several secondhand copies are available - at a price.

  19. John Smith 19 Gold badge
    Unhappy

    Shows the best and the worst of UK high tech development.

    1st rate creative engineering skills.

    3rd rate production management and engineering.

    A detailed description of using computers to run the building of computers was given in 1956 in

    "A progress report on computer applications in computer design"

    authored by an R. Kisch and one Seymour Cray.

    Trouble always seemed to be with the production side of things.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Shows the best and the worst of UK high tech development.

      Very true. But that's us Brits. The same is true of car production unless it's managed by foreign firms. Why is this? Because production's so damned boring compared to the interest of innovation. It's why we are good at designing and building Formula One cars, no need for a production line!

      1. Destroy All Monsters Silver badge
        Devil

        Re: Shows the best and the worst of UK high tech development.

        That's why UK Standard BS 5750 was invented - to slow the Japanese down.

      2. John Smith 19 Gold badge
        Unhappy

        Re: Shows the best and the worst of UK high tech development.

        "The same is true of car production unless it's managed by foreign firms. Why is this? Because production's so damned boring compared to the interest of innovation."

        Unfortunately it's the products that sell in the 100s of 1000s that make the big revenues.

        It's a common misconception that production engineering is simple. If you can afford to throw away 9 out of every 10 items made it is. A 1% failure rate in 100 000 units is 1000 p***ed off customers. Getting a rate of 1 in 100 000 items is rather tougher.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Shows the best and the worst of UK high tech development.

          Exactly. Production engineering is interesting - if you are allowed to do it properly.

          One company I worked for, the MD "did not believe in statistical process control". We had to hide it in an industrial PC which we said was "chaining the machines together for efficiency". At the time, one of our key suppliers was pressing components on a machine which measured the plunger force on every plunger in the jig, and used this to calculate wear and report back on any defects in the feedstock. The other supplier was using 1920s tech which frequently resulted in broken parts. The production manager couldn't understand why it was a bad idea to (a) keep the second supplier and (b) let the parts get mixed up.

          Our great Public Schools have a lot to answer for.

          1. John Smith 19 Gold badge
            Meh

            @ribosome

            "The production manager couldn't understand why it was a bad idea to (a) keep the second supplier and (b) let the parts get mixed up.

            Our great Public Schools have a lot to answer for.

            but I bet he played a great game of cricket/rugby.

  20. ian 22

    We would laugh...

    At the idea of a computer foundry. Little did we know Atlas was built of wrought iron!

  21. Financegozu

    "... just 14 years after the first was put into service..."

    14 years in computer technology are AGES in other industries!

    1. This post has been deleted by its author

  22. Julian 4
    Megaphone

    Less powerful than your Fridge Magnet!

    Why can't we resist the urge to bash old technology, making it out to be worse than it ever was? I'd be really shocked if my washing machine needed 96Kb of code and half a meg of disk space to manage a few switches and read a temperature comparator. I'd fire the software and hardware engineers for incompetence :-) The only thing in common with my washing machine and an Atlas is the drum storage.

    It's the same with all 60s technology. "Did you know the Apollo Computers had less power than your ZX81/Pocket Calculator/Analog Watch?" Rubbish, they had roughly the same power as a BBC Master from the mid-80s and you could write Novels with that, browse multimedia video disks, run businesses and crash the stock market too!

    We're better off respecting both the old technology for what it was and the brilliance of the people who designed it. The Atlas was a landmark machine that had real power, power they didn't waste by filling it with schoolboy quality Flash™ and Javascript coding. We could all learn a thing or two from their era :-)

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