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I've just finished reading Electronic Brains, a book by Mike Hally about the development of the first computers. It's a bookalisation [1] of a short series that ran on Radio 4 a couple of years ago; I didn't hear it at the time, but it looks like it's possible to listen to the whole thing here.

If the series is as enjoyable as the book, it's worth a listen. Like Francis Spufford's The Backroom Boys, Electronic Brains picks out human stories from technological innovations, in this case united by time-frame (roughly 1940 to 1960) rather than nationality. Hally doesn't quite have Spufford's gift for dramatisation--there's nothing quite as heartwarming as the cheers of the British Interplanetary Society--but most of the stories are interesting, and some are more memorable than that.

American, Russian, British and Australian computers are covered, of a wide variety of designs and capabilities. The most colourful, literally, is MONIAC, built by Bill Phillips in about 1950, and used to demonstrate the principles of economics to students at the LSE. It was designed around hydraulics rather than electronics; the flow of money is represented by the flow of coloured water. Elsewhere, the Russian engineers are typically pragmatic; one recalls that 'it was very hot in the computer room, so we needed some cooling. We demolished one wall to make the room bigger, but that wasn't enough, so then we took the roof off as well.' You sort of hope he really does mean the roof, rather than the ceiling. And the final chapter, which documents IBM's rise to dominance of the field, made particularly interesting reading in light of the news that IBM is now selling its PC division.

Electronic Brains is light on engineering detail; it's not the book to read if you want to know how the first computers worked. Instead, it tells you how they came about, and why, and in doing so gives an interesting snapshot of the dawn of the information age.

[1] Well, it's not a novel, is it?

Date: 2004-12-05 09:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ajp.livejournal.com
It sounds interesting; but...

Product Details:

  • Hardcover 224 pages(April 28, 2005)
  • Publisher: Granta Books
  • ISBN: 1862076634
  • Date: 2004-12-05 10:09 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] coalescent.livejournal.com
    Add it to your wishlist, then. :)

    Water computer

    Date: 2004-12-06 11:44 am (UTC)
    From: (Anonymous)
    Isn't this hydraulic computer the one that you can see in the science museum. It would be even cooler if they let you fill it (or a replica) with water and change the interest rates.

    Re: Water computer

    Date: 2004-12-06 04:54 pm (UTC)
    From: (Anonymous)
    Yes (http://www.inc.com/magazine/19950915/2624.html).

    Replicas would be good - small ones, perhaps. Suggest it to the Science Museum shop! A MONIAC emulator probably wouldn't be too hard to write, either ...

    -- tom

    Re: Water computer

    Date: 2004-12-06 04:58 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] coalescent.livejournal.com
    Are you having a conversation with yourself, or was the first comment from Dave (or someone else)?

    Re: Water computer

    Date: 2004-12-06 05:18 pm (UTC)
    From: (Anonymous)
    I sign my posts and i finish questions with question marks.

    -- tom

    Re: Water computer

    Date: 2004-12-11 01:34 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] ebrains.livejournal.com
    Unfortunately the coloured water proved incompatible with long term preservation, so the Science Museum one was refurbished and "embalmed" -- you have to watch the video (of an old BBC programme) to see that one in action. The only surviving Phillips machine that I know of is the one in the Economics Dept at Cambridge University. Not open to the public but occasionally still demonstrated to students I believe. I know of two other survivors, one in New Zealand, the other Australia -- both display-only I believe, though I've not seen them. I love the idea of miniature working replicas in the Science Museum shop ...

    Mike Hally

    PS: I was amazed to see a book review already! "Coalescent" is certainly on the ball.

    Re: Water computer

    Date: 2004-12-11 01:56 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] ebrains.livejournal.com
    "surviving working machine" I meant, when referring to the Cambridge one!

    Mike

    Date: 2004-12-06 05:14 pm (UTC)
    From: (Anonymous)
    IBM is now selling its PC division.


    Don't believe everything you read in The Register. Or everything Charlie reads in The Register. You don't have to be a rocket scientist (http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1736460,00.asp) to see that this is either not big news (it's just outsourcing of production) or is not even true (IBM's not likely to let go of its laptop business).

    -- tom

    Date: 2004-12-07 12:34 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] coalescent.livejournal.com
    Man, if I can't trust Charlie Stross, who can I trust?

    Date: 2004-12-08 01:31 pm (UTC)
    From: (Anonymous)
    Okay, so you can (http://news.google.co.uk/news?q=ibm&hl=en&lr=&sa=N&tab=wn) trust him after all.

    I'm really surprised they've got shot of the laptop business too. They weren't Apple, but they made nice laptops.

    -- tom

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