Harvard Mark IV
The Harvard Mark IV was an electronic stored-program computer built by Harvard University under the supervision of Howard Aiken for the United States Air Force. The computer was finished being built in 1952.[1] It stayed at Harvard, where the Air Force used it extensively.
| Developer | Howard Aiken | 
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Harvard University | 
| Release date | 1952 | 
| Predecessor | Harvard Mark III | 
The Mark IV was all electronic. The Mark IV used magnetic drum and had 200 registers of ferrite magnetic-core memory (one of the first computers to do so). It separated the storage of data and instructions in what is known as the Harvard architecture.
See also
    
- Harvard Mark I
 - Harvard Mark II
 - Harvard Mark III
 - List of vacuum tube computers
 - Howard Aiken
 - Harvard (World War II advanced trainer aircraft)
 
References
    
- Research, United States Office of Naval (1953). A survey of automatic digital computers. Office of Naval Research, Dept. of the Navy. p. 43.
 
Further reading
    
- A History of Computing Technology, Michael R. Williams, 1997, IEEE Computer Society Press, ISBN 0-8186-7739-2
 
External links
    
- Harvard Mark IV 64-bit Magnetic Shift Register at ComputerHistory.org
 
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