100 Years Of IBM: 25 Historic Milestones
June 15, 2011 08:00 AM IBM this week celebrates 100 years of innovation and business optimization. From punch cards to the S/360, from tabulators to teraflops, from CEO Watson to supercomputer Watson, IBM has a unique history. Take a visual tour back through the decades.
SSEC Delivers Speed, Memory, And Programmability
IBM's Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator, introduced in 1948, boasted processing speed, memory, computational capacity, and programmability. The Control Desk seen here was the tip of the iceberg. The rest of the machine surrounded the operator, lining all four walls of a large room. The SSEC is said to be the first computer that could modify a stored program. IBM invited university professors and scientific researchers to use the device at no charge at an IBM facility--a good-will gesture that generally stoked demand for computer purchases.
RECOMMENDED READING:
Inside Watson, IBM's Jeopardy Computer
What's At Stake In IBM's Jeopardy Challenge?
IBM: From Networked Business To Social Media









