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CSIRAC (/ˈsaɪræk/;
Commonwealth Scientific and
Industrial Research Automatic Computer),
originally known as CSIR Mk 1, was Australia's
first digital computer...
- play
music was
CSIRAC,
which was
designed and
built by
Trevor Pearcey and
Maston Beard.
Mathematician Geoff Hill
programmed the
CSIRAC to play po****r...
-
generated by the
computer originally named the CSIR Mark 1 (later
renamed CSIRAC) in
Australia in 1950.
There were
newspaper reports from
America and England...
-
programmer Geoff Hill on the
CSIRAC computer which was
designed and
built by
Trevor Pearcey and
Maston Beard. However,
CSIRAC produced sound by
sending raw...
- synthesis). In June 1951, the
first computer music Colonel Bogey was pla**** on
CSIRAC, Australia's
first digital computer. In 1956,
Lejaren Hiller at the University...
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Manchester Baby, EDSAC,
Manchester Mark 1,
Ferranti Pegasus,
Ferranti Mercury,
CSIRAC, EDVAC,
UNIVAC I, IBM 701, IBM 702, IBM 650, Z22
Third generation (discrete...
-
recommissioned in
Melbourne as
CSIRAC in 1956 as a
general purpose computing machine used by over 700
projects until 1964. The
CSIRAC is the only
surviving first-generation...
- the "Colonel
Bogey March" was the
first music pla**** by a computer, by
CSIRAC, a
computer developed by the
Commonwealth Scientific and
Industrial Research...
- peripherals.
Anecdotally termed the
digit trunk in the
early Australian CSIRAC computer, they were
named after electrical power buses, or busbars. Almost...
- (SSEC) used
paper tape with 74 rows. Australia's 1951
electronic computer,
CSIRAC, used 3-inch (76 mm) wide
paper tape with
twelve rows. A row of smaller...