By Colin Barker, 20 June 2008 08:57
NEWS
On Saturday, it will be exactly 60 years since the world's first stored-program, electronic, digital computer flickered into life in a laboratory at the University of Manchester.
The computer was immediately nicknamed 'Baby' - something of a misnomer, since it was an enormous device.
The Small-Scale Experimental Machine, as Baby was officially named, successfully executed its first program on 21 June, 1948.
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By today's standards, Baby was an extremely primitive machine. In modern terms, the prototype Baby had a random access memory (RAM) of just 32 locations or 'words'. Each word in the RAM consisted of 32 bits and a total of 1,024 bits of memory. According to university press officer Alex Waddington, the computing speed was 1.2 milliseconds per instruction, equivalent to a clock speed of slightly under 1kHz - more than two million times slower than a typical desktop processor today.
Waddington pointed out that an 80GB Apple iPod "is capable of storing 640 million times more information than the original Baby".
Baby was built using metal racks from the Post Office along with hundreds of valves, and the keyboard was a series of push buttons and switches, mounted vertically.
All this year, the University of Manchester will be hosting a series of events to celebrate the birthday of Baby and the work of its inventors, Tom Kilburn and Freddie Williams.
For more on historic computing, see silicon.com's coverage of Bletchley Park in photos, video and news hereÂ…


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1. Karen Challinor
Professor Kilburn was one of the developers of Baby, he had a great sense of humour and always had time for students
I remember him telling us about working on drum storage where he basically took a vacuum cleaner and bolted the drum on, an extremely hazardous thing to do but health and safety didn't get much of a look in in those days
a great man and sadly missed