Until the mid-1970s, most computer access was via punched cards. Programs and data were punched by hand on a key punch machine such as the IBM 026 and fed into a card reader like the IBM 2501. Large computing sites such as Columbia University purchased cards by the truckload and furnished them free of charge to users. During the IBM 360 era (1969-80) Columbia's cards were embossed with the legend "CUCC 360" (Columbia University Computer Center IBM 360) and the Columbia shield (In Lumine Tuo Videbimus Lumen). Here is a pink "job card" (the first card in a deck), preprinted with the essentials of Job Control Language (JCL) job-card syntax. Cards were available in assorted colors, allowing color coding of different sections of a deck such as JCL, program source, data. From the collection of Joe Sulsona.
The punches are interpreted across the top line of the card; this is a feature of the key punch and it works as long as there's a good ribbon. OS JCL Job-card fields are preprinted on the card. Columns 73-80 are reserved for sequence numbers, which can be used by a sorter to put a deck back in order after it has been dropped.
Here is a card punched on a keypunch that either had no interpreter, or a
broken one, or whose ribbon was dry.
The diagonal cut on the upper left facilitates proper orientation of the card (if the card is fed into the reader upside down or face down the data will be misinterpreted). When all the cards in a deck of the corner cut, misoriented cards will stick out.
Here's another customized card (without punches), this one from the
University of Karlsruhe (Germany) Computer Center, courtesy of Michael
Hartmann, Technische Universität München:
Links:
- Early Punch Card Machines (onsite).
- Hollerith 1890 Census Tabulator (onsite).
- Early Punched Card Equipment, 1880-1951, Emerson W. Pugh and Lars Heide, IEEE Global History Network Significant Technological Achievement Recognition Selections (STARS).
- The IBM Punched Card (IBM history archive)
- “Do Not Fold, Spindle, or Mutilate”: A Cultural History of the Punch Card, Steven Lubar, Journal of American Culture, Volume 15, Issue 4, pp.43-55, Winter 1992.
- Punched Cards - A brief illustrated technical history, Douglas W. Jones, University of Iowa.
- Punched Card, Wikipedia.
- Computer programming in the punched card era, Wikipedia.
- The IBM Punched Card, IBM 100, accessed 26 December 2019.
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