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The Their machine
launched a world of change By Kay Mauchly
Antonelli They were a most unlikely pair. They met at the Before they left In the summer of 1941, Mauchly took a course called Emergency
Science and Management Defense Training at He couldn't have found anywhere a more receptive ear than
Eckert's. Despite his youth, Eckert was a genius in vacuum tube circuitry. He
already had a patent in the television field. The two men spent most of their
spare time exploring the possibilities of computing electronically. When the course was completed in September, War was declared on Dec. 8. Within six months, the Ballistics
Research Laboratory of Mauchly saw an immediate need for an electronic computer. In
August 1942, he wrote a proposal titled "The Use of High Speed Vacuum
Tube Devices for Calculating." He envisioned an electronic computer that
could computer a trajectory in 20 seconds. This proposal finally came to the attention of a young Army
mathematician, Lt. Herman Goldstine, who asked for a full proposal. Eckert
and Mauchly worked night and day for several weeks writing up a proposal that
the Army accepted on April 12, 1943. The proposed machine would be called
ENIAC, an acronym for Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer. It was
understood from the beginning that this would be a general-purpose computer. Eckert was chief engineer and Mauchly consultant in charge of
logic and design. With the help and dedication of about a dozen engineers,
numerous wise men and assemblers, ENIAC was built on the first floor of ENIAC was demonstrated to the public on Feb. 14, 1946. It was a
huge success. The New York Times reported "an amazing machine which
applies electronic speeds for the first time to mathematical tasks hitherto
too difficult and cumbersome for solution.. . .
Leaders who saw the device in action for the first time heralded it as a tool
with which to begin to rebuild scientific affairs on new foundations." While ENIAC was being built, Eckert and Mauchly had many more
ideas about how to build a smaller, cheaper, faster, more flexible machine, a
stored program which they called Edvac. Forced out over a patent dispute,
they left Moore School in March 1946 and formed their own company, Electronic
Control Co., to build computers. Many of the engineers who had worked with
them on ENIAC joined them. Astonishingly enough, not a single bank or investment company
was willing to lend them money. So with a loan of $25,000 from Eckert's
father and the enthusiastic support of engineers willing to work for next
to nothing, the new company was launched. The government gave them a
contract to build a computer for the Bureau of Census, which they called
Univac. Douglas Aircraft contracted for a small computer called Binac. Eckert
was chief engineer, and Mauchly was president and salesman. The government took a chance, and soon they had contracts to
build Univac’s for the Army, Navy and Air Force. The company, now renamed
Eckert and Mauchly Computer Co., soon attracted the attention of an investor,
Henry Straus, who was willing to invest time and money. Just when things seemed promising, the company suffered two
massive blows. First, Straus was killed in a plane crash. Then the McCarthy
investigations charged the company with employing engineers who had communist
leanings. The company lost its clearance for government work; all contracts
with the Army, Navy and Air Force were canceled. As president of the company,
Mauchly was charged with hiring communists and ordered off the premises.
He fought back, demanded a hearing, and after two years was allowed back on
the premises. After intensive investigations, the only charge against Mauchly
was that he was "eccentric." Meanwhile, the company, managing with a few civilian contracts
and the Census Bureau contract, was sold to Remington-Rand, a manufacturer of
punch-card equipment, typewriters and other office equipment. Eckert headed
the engineering department, constantly developing new, faster and better
methods for handling and storing data. Mauchly worked on machine languages
and new programming methods. The two worked together all the time, with the
dreamer Mauchly constantly coming up with ideas about what a computer should
be able to do, Eckert constantly inventing hardware to make these things
happen. When his 10-year contract with Remington-Rand expired in 1960,
Mauchly left to form his own company, Mauchly Associates, a construction
management company. Eckert stayed with Remington-Rand as vice president of
its Univac Division. Through its mergers with Sperry Corp. and later
Burroughs, the company came to be called Unisys. In 1971, Univac sued Honeywell for patent infringement. In the
ensuing countersuit, the judge invalidated the ENIAC patents to Eckert
and Mauchly, claiming, among other things, that the ENIAC was in public
use more than a year before the patent was applied for. The testing of
the machine by the Atomic Energy Commission was considered public use. Eckert and Mauchly remained fast friends throughout their lives.
They complemented each other. Mauchly was always the teacher - highly
intelligent, witty and compassionate. Described by many as the
"visionary of the computer age," he was interested in developing
people as well as ideas. Mauchly died in January 1980 from complications of
an inherited blood disease. Speaking at Mauchly's funeral in January 1980,
Eckert said, "He inspired me and he inspired many others. He was not
tied down by inhibitions or tradition. He was certainly one of the most
brilliant people I ever knew." Eckert stayed with the company he had co founded and retired as
vice president of Unisys. This brilliant, original, no-nonsense engineer and
spellbinding speaker died in 1995, just a few months before the 50th anniversary
of ENIAC. In his later years, he had become a spokesman for the computer
industry. He claimed in his speeches that he and Mauchly were the Wright
Brothers of computing. He was honored by the IEEE, Kay Mauchly Antonelli, one of the first women programmers on the
ENIAC, was married to John Mauchly for 32 years. She lives in Ambler. © 2000 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. |
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