<<A related question would be how much work was done outside the USA and UK.
>>
One standard work is "The First Computers : History and Architectures"
Ed Rojas, et al
MIT Press; 2002; ISBN 0-262-68137-4
US : 5 sections
Germany : 7 sections
UK : 5 sections
Japan : 2 sections
as an indication of activity
<<similar questions could be asked about the amount of documentation preserved from
various countries. >>
In the UK context, where there is on-line documentation of the ICL 2900 series is a
question I don't know the answer to
There is of course an operational ICL 2966 at TNMoC, Bletchley Park
Martin
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Koning via cctalk [mailto:cctalk@classiccmp.org]
Sent: 31 January 2024 18:53
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Cc: Wouter de Waal <wrm(a)dW.co.za>za>; Paul Koning <paulkoning(a)comcast.net>
Subject: [cctalk] Re: VCF SoCal
On Jan 31, 2024, at 1:39 PM, Wouter de Waal via cctalk
<cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
I have found that computers are much like
motorcycles: many of the most interesting were never available in the US.
Computers are much like motorcycles: many of the most interesting ones were TERRIBLE!
I wonder what fraction of early (before, say, 1955) computer work was done in the USA. A
substantial fraction no doubt, but perhaps not as large as one might guess. A related
question would be how much work was done outside the USA and UK.
For that matter, similar questions could be asked about the amount of documentation
preserved from various countries. One difficulty, I think, is that resources like
bitsavers have a large proportion of US material. Maybe because of the predominance of
the work, maybe in part because of the distribution of collectors. To pick one example,
material -- even just a passing reference -- about the Philips PR8000 is very nearly
nonexistent. And I see no trace of any other Dutch computer at all on Bitsavers. True,
some stuff can be found in places like the CWI archive, though searching that can be
rather painful.
paul