Looking Back At Australia's First Digital Computer 88
An anonymous reader writes "Sometimes, it's the oldest machines that are the most fascinating. PC & Tech Authority has posted this gallery of photos of the first automatic electronic stored-program computer in Australia and one of the first in the world — CSIRAC. The photos show a machine massive in size — the main system comprised nine steel cabinets containing 2000 valves that weighed over 7000kg. Using valve technology and World War II radar systems as a starting point, the machine was used for various purposes including weather forecasting, forestry, loan repayments and building design. It boasted a 1000Hz memory clock and a serial bus that transferred one bit at a time. The system generated so much heat, cool air needed to be blown up through the cabinets from the basement below. In addition to being Australia's first computer, it is also said to have been the first computer to play digital music anywhere in the world. When CSIRAC was turned off for the last time, a witness described it as 'like something alive dying.'" Museum Victoria has some short but informative pages about CSIRAC, too, including this one about programming the thing, and another about the dangers and annoyances of working on it.
Totology of the day... (Score:2, Insightful)
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Tautology of the day...
There, fixed that for you.
Thank you, come again !
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Obligatory XKCD [xkcd.com] reference.
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If you are really interested there is plenty of information around the internet ... take a look at a http://ww2.csse.unimelb.edu.au/dept/about/csirac/ [unimelb.edu.au] which has good detail including emulator .. It was suitably modest with RAM of 768 20-bit words and storage capacity of 2048 words.
I found the 1959 programming manual quite amusing, particularly the section on binary representations which suggets you reference a manual page for numbers up to 32 - really drives home the point how new all of this was !!!!
"The user should gradually become familiar with the binary symbols for the integers 0,l,2,.,.30,31, which are listed on page (i), but these can be worked out mentally by partitioning the integer into such of the components 16,8,4,2,1 as it contains. Thus 21 = 16 + 4 + 1 = 10101 (binary). It is useful to understand the principles underlying addition and subtraction in the binary system. The addition of corresponding digits follows the table:-
0 + 0 gives 0 with 0 to carry
0 + 1 “ 1 “ 0 “
1 + 0 “ 1 “ 0 “
1 + 1 “ 0 “ 1 “
Thus: -
1010 1101 1100 11010
+1100 +1101 -1010 -01101
10110 11010 0010 01101
where in the case of subtraction the digit is borrowed rather than carried.
serial bus (Score:1)
Groan,
A serial bus can be more than one bit wide, but never mind....
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SCSI?
Re:Patents? (Score:5, Funny)
Wifi: patented! For shame australia. I am legitimately disgusted.
Well get fucked and use a captital A next time.
-- Australia
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You don't hear about that (and the "other countries price gouging", because of course the USA, UK, etc, etc help fund their public research that way too), because other industries don't try to rip the inventor off as much as does the US computer industry.
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It's not my fault that your country is known primarily for racism and government-led patent trolling.
Australia, in 1857, was the first country in the world to grant the vote to Women, indigenous people and allow them to stand for seats of parliament. There were no riots and no one died. So fuck you very much for your misguided and misinformed post.
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Australia gave women the vote in 1902. New Zealand gave women the vote in 1893.South Australia gave women the vote in 1895. Aborigines had the vote in some states prior to Federation, but this was not universal until 1962.
Great, thanks for clearing that up.
You are full of wrong. You are entitled to your own opinions, but not your own facts.
So because I'm wrong does it mean that that Australia is a racist country? Some dickheads are, and if Australia was a racist country we wouldn't have the diversity of peoples we have. So thanks for pointing out my error in dates but it still shows that an Australian state was the first in the world to give Women and Aboriginals the right to vote including the right to stand for office, and that it was bloodless revolution.
i.e. the way democracy *should* work!
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Umm, no. What I said is that you are entitled to your opinions, not your own facts. If you think don't Australia is a racist country then that is your opinion. Whether you are right or wrong is simply someone else's opinion.
I didn't think Australia was all that racist until I travelled out west. It was a shock to me the way that people spoke (black & white people) of other races. It is my opinion that in the cities Australia is multicultural and quite tolerant, but in many (but not all) of the small cou
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Umm, no. What I said is that you are entitled to your opinions, not your own facts. If you think don't Australia is a racist country then that is your opinion. Whether you are right or wrong is simply someone else's opinion.
I understand that but the statement the troll said was "your country is known primarily for racism and government-led patent trolling". Australia certainly contains racist people but the definition of Australia as a racist country is not acceptable because our country protects equality by law. Discrimination in Australia is against the Law. I could no more accept that *primary* characterisation of Australia, as a Country, than I could of New Zealand, Canada, UK, US etc.
If you say Apartheid Africa was know
Re:Patents? (Score:4)
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<Richie> Welcome back to the one day Trollfest where TechLeadNY has just been dismissed for a duck. Pretty piss, poor effort, really.</Richie>
Username begins with "Tech": Check
Slashdot ID > 2500000: Check
Attacks.... Australia??? This guy must have snoozed through the shill orientation class.
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Did they patent any of their wonderful 'discoveries' so that they could leech off of others for decades? Or did Australians not figure that scam out until later?
Australia got scammed out of royalties for plenty of things. A research paper on the photoconductivity properties of selenium, published in 1907 by Professor O U Vonwiller from the University of Sydney, provided the key technology for the subsequent invention of the xerographic process in the United States by Chester Carlston in 1937. The result was the Xerox copier.
Australia got scammed out of plenty of royalties and manufacturing jobs there.
Wifi: patented! For shame australia. I am legitimately disgusted.
For sure Patented because the research into fast fourier transfo
1000 Hz (Score:2)
1000 Hz - you could come very close to hand-cranking it!
sPh
Re:1000 Hz (Score:5, Funny)
1000 Hz - you could come very close to hand-cranking it!
Dude, if you can come close to hand cranking something 1000/second you should really think about not masturbating so much.
mercury delay (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm pretty surprised they didn't retrofit with core memory at some point, but then again, the rats nest of wiring in those photos doesn't inspire a lot of confidence in the upgradeability of the system.
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Re:mercury delay (Score:5, Informative)
I think the first post war British computer was developed by Lyons [leo-computers.org.uk], a food retailer/wholesaler/manufacturer. If memory serves, the British Government of the day rented it for batch jobs. :-)
There's a good book about it, A Computer Called Leo: Lyons Tea Shops, and the worlds first office computer [harpercollins.co.uk].
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Then you are very poorly informed. The Leo was preceded by EDSAC 1, EDSAC II, ACE, and several other machines whose names I forget. Leo was, as the article says "The world's first Office computer". However, the Leo was an amazing development (as were the others for their time).
this Australian machine sounds like it was derived from EDSAC I, which dates from 1946.
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Then my memory was at fault. However, wikipedia [wikipedia.org] reminds me that Lyons contributed finance to EDSAC.
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Actually, it's worse than that. Australia was still officially a British colony at the time (technically, it remained so until 1986), and was under intense pressure from the British government not to pursue computer research.
CSIRAC did have a few innovations, though. It was the first computer musical instrument, and ran one of the first high-level languages. Well, high-level by the standards of the day.
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My first introduction to the concept of mercury delay lines was Cryptonomicon. Fun to see an actual computer that used these.
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Well, magnetic core was pretty new back then. Choosing to go with mercury delay lines is the kind of choice you'd make as a designer because you were familiar with the technology and were confident it would do the job. Cambridge (UK) University's EDSAC was very similar to this Australian beast and successful computer that operated between 1949 and 1958; it's successor EDSAC 2 operated until the mid 60s. Despite being archaic in certain details (memory storage, logic circuitry) these were very architectural
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Well, magnetic core was pretty new back then. Choosing to go with mercury delay lines is the kind of choice you'd make as a designer because you were familiar with the technology and were confident it would do the job.
In 1949, that was true.
But it was not uncommon for 1st generation computers to be modified several times over their operating lifetime to support newer technologies.
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Another one of the CSIRO's many achievements (Score:5, Interesting)
Please note CSIRAC was developed by the CSIRO. Yes this is the same organisation that some people have unfairly labelled as a patent troll regarding their licensing claims over technology they developed in relation to Wi-Fi. The CSIRO is a wonderful organisation that Australians should rightfully feel very proud of as they have long rich history of developing technologies that push the boundaries of science and benefit humanity. Take a look at http://www.csiropedia.csiro.au/display/CSIROpedia/Achievements+by+decade [csiro.au] to see the great volumes of innovation and excellent achievements of the CSIRO.
Disclaimer: I work at the CSIRO and I feel immensely privileged to work in an organisation that not only developed CSIRAC, but is devoted to advancing society through a multitude of diverse cutting edge scientific research endeavours.
Re:Another one of the CSIRO's many achievements (Score:4, Interesting)
Absolutely! Please don't underestimate such advances. Check out the article http://www.csiropedia.csiro.au/display/CSIROpedia/Mechanised+cheese+making [csiro.au]
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Of course, he should be! It's the best thing since sliced bread.
And I should know, being Dutch. What good would sliced bread be without an abundance of cheese?
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blessed are the cheesemakers...
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I've seen CSIRAC at the Melbourne Museum, and it's quite an astonishing sight. It's in its a room dedicated to early computing, and the scale of the machine is something you can't appreciate unless you see it in person.
As for people dissing the CSIRO, get a grip! It's one of the foremost scientific research bodies in Australia, and is responsible for a number of inventions that have benefited _everyone_ (look it up on WIkipedia if you care). It's rare these days to find government-funded science/research or
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I believe it was CSIR back then, which is probably for the best because CSIROAC just wouldn't have the same ring to it :-)
I actually read about CSIRAC in highschool, at which time I thought it'd be fun to use as an online handle.
Funnily enough I now also work at CSIRO, joining 9 years after I'd already adopted the csirac handle. I've really appreciated the creative freedoms I've had, which has resulted in very productive tangents that we've developed as open source. This would not have been possible without
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You're working on digital cheese?
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I had the privilege of working on a project there for a few months. I have to say that the CSIRO is one of the institutions that Australians should be most proud of, but unfortunately, most have little idea of what it is or what kind of work goes on there.
Whatever you're working on, keep up the good work!
The first computer to play music (Score:3, Funny)
CSIRAC @ Caulfield (Score:3, Informative)
Interestingly, all the CSIRAC history forgets to mention it was located at Chisholm Institute of Technology's Caulfield campus (now Monash) for a long time as a display of one of the earliest computers ever made. I worked there and had the keys into the display, I now wish I'd added a bit of graffiti to the mercurary delay lines.
CSIRAC (Score:5, Interesting)
I have sitting right in front of me a copy of:
University of Melbourne
Computation Laboratory
Programming Manual
for the Automatic Electronic Computer
CSIRAC
(based upon papers by T.Pearcey and G.W.Hill)
August 1959
It's only 36 pages long, but is a fascinating read describing the internals of the computer as well as source code for things like division, sin and other fundamental things. I only have it because a company I was working for in the late '80s was about to throw it out in the trash and I walked past at the right time and grabbed it.
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I just saw that the CISRAC emulator code contains a word .doc file that is the manual I have. That's nice .. but I think the having the original is cooler!
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Sin and cos (Score:1)
Download the CSIRAC emulator now ! (Score:2)
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More on its history (Score:4, Informative)
There is a book about it :
McCann, D. and Thorne, P. 2000. The Last of the First: CSIRAC: Australia's First Computer. Department of Computer Software Engineering, The University of Melbourne.
Too bad there is no ISBN so I have no idea where to get a copy outside of the Melbourne Museum where the machine is currently pretending to work.
In the second picture [pcauthority.com.au] you can see a wood case with boxes. That is its /lib and the smaller box is its /usr/local/lib. There are paper tapes inside cardboard boxes with libraries of functions such as multiply integer and real square root.
Its "assembly language" sort of looked like "(D0)->H1" for save 10 input bits into H. That was later changed to "0 D HL". "103 -> S" was changed to "3 7 K S" which is jump to address 103 or Jump 3x32+7. Of course there was no assembler in the early days so it was all punched using tables.
The mercury delay lines are interesting. You can put about half a kbit in one tube but you have to keep refreshing it as the sound of a bit goes from one end to the other and then gets regenerated.
Re:More on its history (Score:4, Funny)
Wow, that *is* massive. (Score:3)
the main system comprised nine steel cabinets containing 2000 valves that weighed over 7000kg
By my math that's about 14000 metric tons in valves alone. That's 80% of the displacement of the HMS Dreadnought, the first modern battleship.
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I don't think the valves weighed 7000kg EACH.
Valves (Score:2)
In case someone reading the article is too young to recognize the term, a "valve" is an electron tube, one of those things that would sometimes have to be replaced in the back of a radio or TV set. Yes, they got quite hot and any large array of them required special cooling. Even a radio or TV set could warm a room.
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Interesting (Score:2)
The photos are interesting.
In keeping with the traditions of most tech oriented sites, the comments rapidly devolve into political rants and pro/anti Apple statements.
What's it's capacity in kilohogsheads? (Score:1)
> weighed over 7000kg
Actually, it weighed over 15400 lbs. [wikipedia.org]
Why did these require so much power? (Score:3)
One thing I've never understood is why these early computers (apparently) used power-hungry standard vacuum tubes, requiring huge cooling systems, rather than the vacuum tubes used in portable radios.
In the 1930s/40s - not sure when - battery-operated radios (portable for going to the beach, as well as non-portable for people who had no electricity before rural electrification) were common. These had vacuum tubes with a filament voltage of 1.1-1.5VDC at maybe 50mA; the filament served as the cathode to conserve power. The B+ battery was anywhere from 22.5V to 90V and, because they were expensive, were expected to last a long time. The tubes had numbers of the form 1xx, like 1S5 (a pentode/diode).
So 2000 of these would use only about 150 watts for the filaments, which is less than many modern desktops. I don't have a number for the B+ power consumption. I vaguely recall from a schematic I saw ages ago that there were high-valued resistors, maybe around 10K-100K ohms, in series with some of the plates in the low-level signal circuits, so it might not have been very much. Maybe someone else knows.
Of course higher-power tubes might be needed to drive the I/O such as relays etc., but it seems the main logic circuitry could have been relatively low power.
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I'm not sure that's a sufficient reason. All Valves are "N-type", and a typical bipolar logic gate (or bistable) using only NPN transistors does indeed ground the emitters. The reason for indirect heating of the cathode isn't really about biasing (especially if a negative supply rail exists), but about allowing cheap, unrectified AC supplies to be used for the heater without introducing hum into the signal. For a battery-driven radio, this problem vanishes.
Incidentally, I recently built a battery-powered va
Re: Why so much power? - RELIABILITY (Score:1)
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Blink3nlights have more MIPS (Score:2)
Interesting fact: The micro that runs the blinkenlights on the CSIRAC panel these days has more grunt than the original computer. The things you learn at Linuxconf...
Vik :v)
Mislabeled Image #14 (Score:1)