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  • Title
    Manual - English Electric Computers KDF9 ALGOL Programming
  • Reference
    YA2005.79
  • Production date
    01-01-1963 - 31-12-1964
  • Creator
    • English Electric Company LimitedBiography
  • Scope and Content
    One volume ALGOL programming manual. The KDF 9 was built by English Electric Computers in Manchester and is believed to have been the first zero-address instruction format computer to have been announced (in 1960). It was first delivered at about the same time (early 1963) as the other famous zero-address computer, the Burroughs B5000 in America. It was a fully transistorised computer with core store and used M/T as the main storage media. Input was usually paper tape. Some systems used large fixed disks or drums for random access. 'Large' being physical (1 ton) rather than storage capacity (24Mb). The KDF9 was primarily a scientific rather than a commercial system - a number of early FORTRAN and ALGOL compilers were written for it.
  • Extent
    1 volume
  • Physical description
    Spiral-bound volume. The condition of the manual is good. There is a small tear to the front cover in the bottom lefthand corner. Care should be taken when opening the volume not to catch this tear.
  • Language
    English
  • Archival history
    The manual was produced by English Electric Computers as part of a series of manuals relating to their own products. The manual was acquired by the donor when he attended a course on ALGOL programming in the late 1960s.
  • Level of description
    TOP
  • Repository name
    Science and Industry Museum
  • Conditions governing access
    Open access.
  • Conditions governing Reproduction
    Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.
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