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Q: Who use Mark E Dean's IBM computer?
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Is compaq compatible with an IBM computer can i use memory from IBM for my compaq presario 4410 computer?

Depends on how you want them to be compatible.


The first computer introduced in Nepal?

The National Computer Center of Nepal had an IBM 1401 at least several years before 1978. It was use for many purposes including census and Royal Nepal Airlines. It was certainly the first large computer used there.


How many vacuum tubes did the Harvard Mark I computer have?

None. The Harvard Mark 1 ASCC (IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator) was an electromechanical computer built for Harvard by IBM's Endicott NY facility in 1944. It was constructed from 765,000 components which included switches, relays, motors, rotating shafts, and clutches. It contained no vacuum tubes.The Harvard Mark III ADEC (Aiken Dahlgren Electronic Calculator) was the first computer to use vacuum tubes. It was built at Harvard in 1949 using 5000 vacuum tubes and 1500 crystal diodes, along with electromechanical components. The Harvard Mark IV, built in 1952, was the first fully electronic design.


When did the first PC come out?

The IBM 5150 is considered the first personal computer for home use. It was introduced to the public in August of 1981.


Give the history of computer?

A full timeline is very hard to piece together and would likely be hundreds of pages long. However I will make an attempt at touching some highlights:1822, Difference Engine #1, London England, special purpose mechanical digital computer (never built).1837, Analytical Engine, London England, programmable mechanical digital computer (never built).1849, Difference Engine #2, London England, special purpose mechanical digital computer (not built until 1991 by the London Science Museum).1931, Bush Differential Analyzer, MIT, programmable mechanical analog computer.1931, Mark XV Norden Bombsight, Carl L. Norden Company, special purpose electromechanical analog computer (gravity bomb fall solution).1938, Zuse Z1, Germany, programmable mechanical digital computer (floating point).1941, Zuse Z3, Germany, programmable electromechanical digital computer (floating point).1942, ABC, University of Iowa Ames Iowa, special purpose electronic digital computer (array/vector processor solving simultaneous equations up to 29 variables).1943, Torpedo Data Computer (TDC) Mark IV, Arma Corporation, special purpose electromechanical analog computer (submarine torpedo aiming solution).1944, Colossus Mark I, Bletchley Park, programmable electronic digital computer (cryptanalytic).1944, Harvard Mark I, Harvard, programmable electromechanical digital computer.1945, Zuse Z4, Germany, programmable electromechanical digital computer (floating point).1946, ENIAC, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania, programmable electronic digital computer.1948, Manchester Baby, Victoria University of Manchester, programmable electronic digital computer (first computer built using a stored program).1949, CSIRAC, Australia, programmable electronic digital computer.1951, UNIVAC I, Remington Rand, programmable electronic digital computer.1951, UNIVAC 1101, Remington Rand, programmable electronic digital computer.1952, IBM 701, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer.1953, IBM 702, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer.1953, UNIVAC 1103, Remington Rand, programmable electronic digital computer.1953, IBM 650, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer.1954, IBM 704, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer (first US computer w/ floating point).1954, IBM NORC, IBM, programmable electronic digital supercomputer (usually credited as being the first supercomputer).1956, IBM 705 Model I, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer.1956, IBM 305 RAMAC, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer (w/ the first harddisk, the IBM 350).1957, UNIVAC 1104, Remington Rand, ruggedized programmable electronic digital computer (designed for the BOMARC missile but never used, replaced by a version of the AN/USQ-20, designated the G-40).1958, AN/FSQ-7, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer (part of the air force's SAGE air defense system, the largest computer ever built).1959, DEC PDP-1, DEC, programmable electronic digital computer (the first computer sold that focused on user interaction rather than just efficient use of computer time).1960, UNIVAC LARC, Sperry Rand, programmable electronic digital supercomputer (designed as a dual CPU computer but neither of the 2 systems built had the second CPU).1961, IBM 7030 Stretch, IBM, programmable electronic digital supercomputer, failed to meet its ambitious performance goals (100 times the speed of an IBM 704) so considered a failure and withdrawn from production with only 9 machines built, however it introduced many concepts and features present in many modern computers: the byte, memory protection, generalized interrupts, cache memory, instruction pipelining, prefetch and decoding, memory bank interleaving, etc.1961, AN/USQ-20, Sperry Rand, ruggedized programmable electronic digital computer.1962, UNIVAC 1107, Sperry Rand, programmable electronic digital computer.1962, D-17B the Minuteman I missile guidance computer, Autonetics Division of North American Aviation, ruggedized programmable electronic digital computer.1964, IBM System 360, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer.1964, CDC 6600, Control Data Corporation, programmable electronic digital supercomputer, with over 600 systems built it is considered to be the first mass produced supercomputer.1964, D-37C the Minuteman II missile guidance computer, Autonetics Division of North American Aviation, ruggedized programmable electronic digital computer.1965, DEC PDP-8, DEC, programmable electronic digital computer (several versions small enough to fit on a desktop).1966, Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC), MIT Instrumentation Laboratory, ruggedized programmable electronic digital computer (moon landings).1971, IBM System 370, IBM, programmable electronic digital computer (used writable microcode storage, introduced the first floppy disc as a method of loading this microcode storage with microinstructions when the machine was turned on).1971, Intel 4004, Intel, first microprocessor available to the public.1974, STAR-100, Control Data Corporation, programmable electronic digital supercomputer (vector processor).1976, Cray-1, Cray Research, programmable electronic digital supercomputer (vector processor).1977, DEC VAX, DEC, programmable electronic digital computer (usually considered the pinnacle of the CISC architecture machines).

Related questions

Is compaq compatible with an IBM computer can i use memory from IBM for my compaq presario 4410 computer?

Depends on how you want them to be compatible.


What brand of computer do businesses use?

dell i thinkMost businesses use IBM machines


Do I have to use an IBM motherboard in an IBM computer?

Yes, if you are using IBM specific components (Processor, RAM, etc.) they will most likely not work seemlessly in another motherboard.


Floppy drive use the dma channel?

a customer as an IBM Desktop computer


How do you unlock a laptop computer for IBM thinkpad Windows 95?

use your password or use the startup disk if it can't start


What kind of computer does Hubble use?

The computer components in the Hubble telescope were custom-designed by IBM. It would be difficult to compare it to any consumer computer system.


Computer servers for household use?

IBM makes fantastic servers for the household. They are extremely reliable and trustworthy.


The first computer introduced in Nepal?

The National Computer Center of Nepal had an IBM 1401 at least several years before 1978. It was use for many purposes including census and Royal Nepal Airlines. It was certainly the first large computer used there.


How many vacuum tubes did the Harvard Mark I computer have?

None. The Harvard Mark 1 ASCC (IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator) was an electromechanical computer built for Harvard by IBM's Endicott NY facility in 1944. It was constructed from 765,000 components which included switches, relays, motors, rotating shafts, and clutches. It contained no vacuum tubes.The Harvard Mark III ADEC (Aiken Dahlgren Electronic Calculator) was the first computer to use vacuum tubes. It was built at Harvard in 1949 using 5000 vacuum tubes and 1500 crystal diodes, along with electromechanical components. The Harvard Mark IV, built in 1952, was the first fully electronic design.


When did the first PC come out?

The IBM 5150 is considered the first personal computer for home use. It was introduced to the public in August of 1981.


What computer companies use outsourcing to China?

Computer companies that are outsourcing to China at this time include IBM, Sun Microsytems and Dell. Another company that outsources to China is Modus Media.


What was the first system that Bill Gates developed for IBM?

Gates and Allen.went out and purchased.an operating system called Q-Dos, which had been developed by Seattle Computer. Q-Dos was compatible with the Intel processor that IBM intended to use. The two then adapted the Q-Dos system and presented it to IBM