
We often reckon of computers as a very modern phenomenon, but there were really plenty of computers around 50 years ago. They just weren’t an everyman commodity, instead limited to goverment and corporate use. And they certainly weren’t small. Some of them had imaginative names like Whirlwind, Colossus and Pegasus, while others were slightly less poetic with names like Z4, AN/FSQ-7 and ENIAC.
Not more than we have listed as many as 19 examples of computers from the early days, pioneering efforts that although cutting edge in their day now look tenderly retro.
These computers didn’t use the same kind of components as we do today. The computers in the 1940s and 1950s were mostly based on vacuum tubes. Transistors showed up late in the game, and integrated circuits were just a distant dream and didn’t start showing up in computers until the 1960s, and then in very limited capacity. How tempting it would be to travel back in time and show the engineers of these computers a normal modern-day PC, just to see their reaction.
We have listed the completion year for each computer, although often work on them had begun several years earlier (they were huge projects). We’ve arranged them in chronological order, oldest initially. Please note that these are just a sample, there are plenty we didn’t include (in order to make this a blog post and not a book
).
Year: 1944
Designed by the legendary German engineer Konrad Zuse, the Z4 was a follow-up to its pioneering predecessor, the Z3 computer he built in 1941 (the world’s initially programmable, automatic computing machine). The Z4 used in this area 4,000 watts of power and ran at approximately 40 Hz. It had 64 32-bit registers, the equivalent of 512 byte of memory. One addition took 0.4 seconds.

Above: The Z4 computer, as seen in a German museum (in Munich).
Year: 1944
Two generations of Colossus, the Mark 1 and Mark 2, were used by British codebreakers to decrypt coded German messages at the end of WW2. It processed 5,000 characters per second (it could process quicker, but then the paper tapes holding the data would break). The existence of Colossus and additional British codebreaking machines remained secret until the 1970s out of dread that widespread knowledge would encourage more efficient encryption algorithms.

Above, top: The Colossus in its heyday. Note the punched paper tape running on the right side. Above, bottom: A reconstructed Colossus.
Year: 1946
When the ENIAC was announced in 1946 the press immediately started calling it a “Giant Brain”. ENIAC was the world’s initially general-purpose electronic, digital computer and is probably the most well-known of the ones included in this article. It weighed 27 tons. Among additional things, ENIAC was used for calculations for the creation the hydrogen bomb. Programming the machine could take weeks, since after the curriculum had been figured out on paper you initially had to manipulate the various switches and cables that controlled the programming and then follow that with verification and debugging.

Above, top: The ENIAC in all its glory. Above, bottom: Ancient-school programming?
Year: 1951
The Whirlwind was the initially computer to use video displays for output. The initially version had 512 byte of main memory and could do 20,000 instructions per second, although a switch to a different kind of memory shortly doubled its performance and made it the fastest computer of its time.

Above, top left: The Whirlwind. Above, top right: Closeup of the circuitry. Above, bottom: The control room.
Year: 1951
An acronym for UNIVersal Automatic Computer, the UNIVAC I was the initially US-produced money-making computer. It was designed by the inventors of the ENIAC. A total of 46 systems were built and delivered. It weighed 13 tons (29,000 pounds), ran at 2.25 MHz and could perform 1,905 instructions per second. The UNIVAC I cost up to $1.5 million per system.

Above: The UNIVAC I, built by Remington Rand (see their nifty logo top left in the image).
Year: 1951
Small for the Wolverhampton Instrument for Teaching Computing from Harwell, the WITCH was also known as The Harwell Dekatron Computer. It was slow (a multiplication took 5-10 seconds), but this was justified by its ability to run long periods of time unattended. It could therefore be left on its own with a large amount of input data. At one point it was left running over the Christmas and New Year celebration and was still effective when the staff came back 10 days shortly.

Above: The WITCH in use. Is it just us, or do they look a bit confused?
Year: 1953
Pingdom being Swedish, we had to include this Swedish computer from 1953. BESK stands for Binär Elektronisk SekvensKalkylator, which is Swedish for Binary Electronic Sequence Calculator. The main memory was 512 40-bit words, the equivalent of 2,560 byte. An addition could be performed in 56 microseconds, and a multiplication in 350 microseconds. For a small time it was the world’s fastest computer. Small aside, “besk” means “bitter” (as in taste) in Swedish, but besk is also an alcoholic beverage from the south of Sweden. The name was a pun sneaked in by the computer’s creator, who had previously had the computer name COGNAC rejected by officials.

Above: The control panel for the Swedish BESK computer.
Year: 1955
The IBM 702 had been announced as early as 1953, but the initially production model wasn’t installed until 1955. It was a money-making computer that could be leased from IBM. The system could have a maximum of 11,000 7-bit characters of main memory, i.e. roughly 10 kilobytes. It could do 3,950 additions or subtractions per second, but multiplication and division was significantly slower.

Above: An IBM 702 installation.
Year: 1954
The IBM Naval Ordnance Research Calculator was arguably the initially supercomputer and was the most powerful computer of its time. It could perform 15,000 operations per second, and the initially version had 2,000 64-bit words of main memory, roughly the equivalent of 16 kilobytes.

Above: Various angles of the IBM NORC.
Year: 1956
This computer is most well-known for being the initially money-making computer delivered with a hard disk drive. The hard disk drive could store a total of just under 5 MB and consisted of 50 24-inch diameter disks. The 305 RAMAC was one of the largest computers IBM ever built. (If you find ancient hard drives fascinating, check out our post in this area the history of computer data storage.)

Above: Yes, those huge units in the center are hard disk drives. Each storing a massive 5 MB…
Year: 1956
The Bendix G-15 weighed 450 kg (950 lb) and cost around $60,000. It had 2,160 29-bit words of memory, the equivalent of in this area 7.6 kilobyte. The G-15 has sometimes been called the initially personal computer, although there are disagreements in this area this. More than 400 were made.

Above: The Bendix G-15. It looks like a very huge tower desktop computer. Kind of.
Year: 1956
The British computer Ferranti Pegasus was designed and built to be cheap and reliable. It had 5,120 40-bit words of memory, the equivalent of 25 kilobyte, plus 56 words (280 byte) of quick memory. A Pegasus 2 from 1959 is still operational at the Science Museum in London. It is the world’s oldest effective digital computer.

Above: A Pegasus 2 at the Science Museum in London. The cabinet was built by Rolls Royce, hence the use of car door handles for the doors. Note also the inserted clock at the small end.
Year: 1958
A successor to the Whirlwind, based fundamentally on the design of the never-realized the AN/FSQ-7 was developed by IBM in collaboration with the US Air Break down to be used with the SAGE air defense system. It is sometimes incorrectly referred to as the Whirlwind II. One computer took up 2,000 sqm of floor space (roughly half an acre) and weighed 275 tons. They are the largest computers ever built (52 of them were made). The AN/FSQ-7 could perform in this area 75,000 instructions per second.

Above, top: An installation of the AN/FSQ-7. Each cabinet a built-in phone to save time when calling in problems (seen here at the small end of the nearest cabinet). Above, bottom: SAGE control consoles. A sign of different times: each console had a built-in cigarette lighter and ashtray.
Year: 1959
A typical IBM 7090 system cost $2.9 million and was designed for large-scale scientific and technological applications. Among additional things, it was used by NASA to control space flights. A 7090 system is featured in the movie Dr. Strangelove. In 1961, a shortly version, the 7094, became the initially computer ever to sing (the song Daisy Bell). This was the inspiration for a scene in 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Above:The IBM 7090. Trivia: The second man on the left is Smith DeFrance, founding director of the NASA Ames Research Focal point.
Year: 1959
The buff up AKAT-1 was the world’s initially transistor-based differential analyzer, designed specifically to decipher systems of differential equations. It was never mass produced due to the public’s policies at that time.

Above: The AKAT-1.
Year: 1960
Never massproduced, the Datasaab D2 was a concept computer build in Sweden. It weighed “only” 200 kg and could be placed on a desktop. It held the equivalent of 15 kilobyte of memory and could perform 100,000 additions per second. It was a prototype designed to test the feasibility of computerized navigation aid in aircraft. Datasaab was the computer division of the aircraft manufacturer Saab, which made fighter jets for Sweden.

Above left: The Datasaab D2 in its entirety. Above right: Closeup of its control panel.
Year: 1962
The name is an acronym for Ballistic Research Laboratories Electronic Scientific Computer. It was, as its name suggest, designed primarily for scientific and military tasks. It could do five million operations per second and had 4096 72-bit words of memory, the equivalent of 36 kilobyte.

Above: The awesome-looking console for the BRLESC I computer.
Year: 1963
The Honeywell 200 and its successors were introduced to compete with affordable money-making computers from IBM (specifically the IBM 1401). The native assembly language used to curriculum the Honeywell computer was named Easycoder. Yes, at that time, assembly language was considered simple to code in.
Honeywell ran an ad campaign over several years that they called the Liberator, using various very creative sculptures made from computer parts (one example available here).

Above: The H200 at work.
Year: 1964
The transistor-based UNIVAC 1108 supported up to three CPUs and up to 262,144 36-bit words of memory (more than 1 MB). The memory used integrated circuits (quite rare at the time) instead of the thin film core memory used in its predecessor, the 1107.

Above: A shortly model of the 1108 from 1969.
As you can see from some of the examples above, acronyms were highly well loved. Some scientists were so fed up with this acronym mania that they started mocking it. There was for example a computer called MANIAC (I and II), which stood for Mathematical Analyzer, Numerical Integrator, and Computer.
It’s fascinating to look back and see how things were in the early days of computing, and it truly illuminates how far we have come. Today we have more computing power in our pocket than what would fit in entire buildings in the past. Our most modest smartphones widely exceed the performance and storage capacity of these early behemoths.
Data sources: Nearly needless to say, Wikipedia was an invaluable starting point when researching this post, which in turn uses a ton of additional places as data sources. Too many to mention here.
Image sources: Z4 by Clemens Pfeiffer; Colossus ancient image by UK government, rebuild image by MaltaGC; ENIAC metaphors are from the US Army; Whirlwind top left from Computerhistory.org, circuitry by Dpbsmith, control room from MIT; UNIVAC I from US Army; WITCH from the Computer Conservation Society; BESK by Liftarn, IBM 702 from the US Federal Government;IBM NORC metaphors from Columbia University; IBM 305 RAMAC from the US Federal Government; Bendix G-15 by unknown instigator (stored by Wikipedia); Pegasus; AN/FSQ-7 from US Air Break down, SAGE consoles by Steve Jurvetson; IBM 7090 by NASA; AKAT-1 by Topory; Datasaab D2 metaphors by Lars Aronsson; BRLESC I from US Army; Honeywell 200 image from unknown source; UNIVAC 1108 by the manufacturer.

From:
Retro delight: Gallery of early computers (1940s – 1960s)