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The First Computers in East Africa and what became of them (2015)

owaahh.com

70 points by cobralibre 6 years ago · 10 comments

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MrBuddyCasino 6 years ago

> But the machine in Dar es Salaam disappeared during the 1964 Zanzibar Revolution. At some point during the upheaval, somebody with knowledge of how to dismantle the heavy and complicated machine removed it from its known location. British intelligence later reported that the machine had somehow made its way to China where it had been carefully disassembled and analyzed and used as a learning tool for their computer industry.

Thats an interesting ending.

jefftk 6 years ago

> There was a piece of EAM equipment called a “multiplier” that used valves (predecessor to transistors, designed for use in radios and TVs). This machine could read two numbers out of a punched card, and multiply (or divide) them and punch the result back into different columns in the same card. The problem was that it was not very reliable (valves kept burning out – when you have some hundreds of valves, the chances of one “going” while you are processing some thousand of electricity billing cards is pretty likely).

Note that they're using the British "valve" for what is typically called a "vacuum tube".

  • Animats 6 years ago

    That was probably an IBM 604.[1] The 604 was the first piece of electronic computing equipment manufactured and sold in quantity. It's an illustration of the big problem of the era - no good memory devices. The 604 had electronic add, subtract, multiply, divide, and control flow, but was programmed with a plugboard and had punched-card I/O. No place to store data other than a few registers.

    Tube failure was more or less under control by then. IBM had a tube R&D center on the Hudson River working on that. They came up with a more reliable tube design and had RCA make the tubes in quantity. Experimental machines like the ENIAC could have big staffs replacing tubes and maintaining the machine, but a commercial product had to have reliable operation.

    IBM had people working on electronic computing as early as 1936, but it took over a decade to get to a shippable product. WWII got in the way, of course.

    [1] http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/604.html

contingencies 6 years ago

Saw an obscure early US computer in the museum of a tin mine in China (Gejiu, Yunnan). I believe it was used to calculate trigonometric functions for mine shaft planning. French presence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries gave way in the 1940s to US presence, before communism and modernity.

perl4ever 6 years ago

It's kind of weird to think about nuclear reactors being older than computers...particularly in Africa.

badrabbit 6 years ago

> As part of the British Empire, East Africa used some of the...

Minor correction,only parts of east africa were British colonies.

droithomme 6 years ago

What a fun article. Starts in the late 1800s and includes problems where computers go down because of snake shooting.

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