The exact person is unknown, but it was developed late in WW2 on the ENIAC project. John von Neuman is commonly credited with it because after long conversation with the University of Pennsylvania people who had worked on ENIAC and were planning a new computer incorporating a stored program called EDVAC, he wrote a paper on the subject summarizing the ideas discussed. Unfortunately the First Draft of this paper "escaped" before it could be revised, corrected, and all relevant names added. Only von Neuman's name was listed.
Bangladesh
Edward Tolman
List three ways in whicn configuration information can be stored in a motherboard
The Head Start Program was set up by the US Department of Health and Human Services to provide education, health, and parental help for people of lower income.
addressing modes helps the programmer to store or retrieve the data which is stored in any part of the data memory by addressing mode specified in the program.
a program that is stored in the memory of the computer that executes it
Von Neumann
The concept of stored program was presented by Dr.John Von Neumann.
John Von Neumann.
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John von Neumann
program
Data and program instructions are stored in primary/electronic memory. Explain the concept of electronic memory ''the concept of electronic memory''
Von Neumann was the first person to suggest to concept of the stored program. This concept states that there is no difference between computer instructions and data. More importantly, he suggested that it was not necessary to have separate storage location for a computer program and data -- hence today, computer instructions are stored in primary memory for execution, along with other data.
In 1981 Crandall introduced the concept of the frequent-flier program, calling it "AAdvantage" and rewarding repeat customers with free flying miles. American Airlines also introduced "AAirpass
Stored-program concept: Storage of instructions in computer memory to enable it to perform a variety of tasks in sequence or intermittently. The idea was introduced in the late 1940s by John von Neumann, who proposed that a program be electronically stored in binary-number format in a memory device so that instructions could be modified by the computer as determined by intermediate computational results. Other engineers, notably John W. Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert, contributed to this idea, which enabled digital computers to become much more flexible and powerful. Nevertheless, engineers in England built the first stored-program computer, the Manchester Mark I, shortly before the Americans built EDVAC, both operational in 1949.
Yes, the concept of cashless policy was introduced in NIGERIA.