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         Aiken Howard:     more books (49)
  1. Howard Aiken: Portrait of a Computer Pioneer (History of Computing) by I. Bernard Cohen, 2000-08-28
  2. Uncle Tom's Cabin: by George L. Aiken and George C. Howard, 1852 (Nineteenth-Century American Musical Theater Series) by George L. Aiken, George C. Howard, 1994-03-01
  3. Reforming Marine and Commercial Insurance Law
  4. Makin' Numbers: Howard Aiken and the Computer (History of Computing)
  5. Logan: Shadow Society by Howard Mackie, Mark Jason, 1996
  6. Howard Hathaway Aiken: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i>
  7. The Birds Of El Paso County, Colorado, Part 1-2 (1914) by Charles Edward Howard Aiken, Edward Royal Warren, 2010-02-17
  8. The birds of El Paso County, Colorado by Charles Edward Howard Aiken, 2010-09-08
  9. Will Howard Smith and McQueen Smith Farms by Boone Aiken, 1971
  10. Proceedings of an International Symposium on the Theory of Switching (2-5 April 1957), 2 Vols by Howard Aiken, 1959-01-01
  11. Description of a Magnetic Drum Calculator by the Staff of the Computation Laboratory. by Howard H., et al.) Harvard University. Computation Laboratory. (Aiken, 1952
  12. The Electric Grape [by Burgess], in THE AMERICAN SCHOLAR, 35:4 (Autumn 1966), pp. 719-720 [35th Anniversary Issue] by Anthony (Conrad Aiken) (Howard Nemerov) Burgess, 1966
  13. SYNTHESIS OF ELECTRONIC COMPUTING AND CONTROL CIRCUITS. Annals of the Computation Laboratory Harvard University Volume XXVII. by Howard H, An Wang et. al. (Staff of the Computation Laboratory) AIKEN, 1951
  14. Tables of Generalized Sine- and Cosine- Integral Functions: Part II. The Annals of the Computation Laboratory of Harvard University Volume XIX by Howard H., et al. Aiken, 1949

1. Howard H. Aiken
Howard Aiken. principal papers. hardware Mark I. software. keywords Howard Hathaway Aiken was born March 8, 1900 in Hoboken, New Jersey.
http://www.thocp.net/biographies/aiken_howard.html

Howard Hathaway Aiken
March 8, 1900, Hoboken NJ, USA
March 14, 1973, St. Louis, USA
Howard Aiken Related Articles Related Resources Related Topics Principal papers Hardware Mark I Software See Also Keywords Mark I Achievement Invented/developed the Mark I Biography Howard Hathaway Aiken was born March 8, 1900 in Hoboken, New Jersey. However he grew up in Indianapolis, Indiana where he attended the Arsenal Technical High School. After high school he studied at the University of Wisconsin where he received a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering. During college Aiken worked for the Madison Gas Company; after graduation he was promoted to chief engineer there.
In 1935 Aiken decided to return to school. In 1939 he received a Ph.D. from Harvard University. It was while working on his doctoral thesis in physics that Aiken began to think about constructing a machine to help with the more tedious of calculations. Aiken began to talk about his idea and to do some research into what could be done. With some help from colleagues at the university, Aiken succeeded in convincing IBM to fund his project.
The idea was to build an electromachanic machine that could perform mathematical operations quickly and efficiently and allow a person to spend more time thinking instead of laboring over tedious calculations. IBM was to build the machine with Aiken acting as head of the construction team and donate it to Harvard with the requirement that IBM would get the credit for building it. The constructing team was to use machine components that IBM already had in existence.

2. Howard Aiken's Harvard Mark I (the IBM ASCC)
1939 AD to 1944 AD Howard Aiken's Harvard Mark I (the IBM ASCC)
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3. Howard Aiken Makin' A Computer Wonder
Howard Aiken Makin' a Computer Wonder
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4. Howard Aiken
On March 8, 1900, Howard Aiken was born in Hoboken, New Jersey, although he was raised in Indianapolis, Indiana.
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5. Howard H. Aiken
Howard Hathaway Aiken
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6. The Beaufort Gazette Former Aiken County Sheriff Howard Sellers
AIKEN, S.C. (AP) Former Aiken County Sheriff Howard Sellers has died at age 60. Sellers died Wednesday in Anniston, Ala.
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7. Howard Aiken And Grace Hopper - Inventors Of The Mark I Computer
Howard Aiken and Grace Hopper computer inventors with the Mark I computer.
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8. Aiken
Biography of Howard Aiken (19001973)
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9. Aiken, Howard Hathaway Encyclop Dia Britannica
Aiken, Howard Hathaway mathematician who invented the Harvard Mark I, forerunner of the modern electronic digital computer.
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10. Dictionary Of Computers - Aiken, Howard Hathaway
Frames not supported. Index. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z. Aiken, Howard Hathaway. US mathematician and computer pioneer.
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11. Howard Aiken
aiken howard. Corso,P. The Day After Roswell. 1997 (1646); Hafner,K. Markoff aiken howard. Click on a name for a new proximity search HOLLERITH HERMAN
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AIKEN HOWARD
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12. Aiken Howard And Associates
Debt collecting, medical collection, country wide tracing, tertiary and corporatecollections by Parker Sinclair South Africa.
http://www.aikenhoward.co.za/
Our Purpose To work together as a team with our clients as an extension of our clients business to overcome all obstacles en route to the pinnacle of excellence and professionalism.
To continue providing custom designed and integrated delinquent debt administration services of the highest quality to our clients.
To always put our clients interests first.
To bring out the best in our staff members.
To ensure that all our staff are employed on an experience basis within the boundries of the new South Africa. Our Goals To find innovative and dynamic ways of making and increasingly valuable contribution to the delinquent debt administration services in South Africa.
To instil integrity, pride, dignity and mutual respect in all who work in our Company. Our Values Trust Integrity Honesty Client Orientation Human Dignity A sense of purpose Motivation through positive attitudes Service Excellence Pride in what we do

13. Howard Aiken - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Howard Hathaway Aiken is considered one of the pioneers of the computer field,being the primary engineer behind IBM s Harvard Mark I computer.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Aiken
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Howard Aiken
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Harvard Mark I / IBM ASCC, left side. Howard Hathaway Aiken is considered one of the pioneers of the computer field, being the primary engineer behind IBM 's Harvard Mark I computer. He was born on March 9 in Hoboken, New Jersey and passed away on March 14 in St. Louis, Missouri. He studied at the University of Wisconsin, Madison , and later obtained his Ph.D. in physics at Harvard University in . During this time he encountered differential equations that he could only solve numerically. As such, he envisioned an electro-mechanical computing device that could do much of the tedious work for him. This computer was originally called the Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (ASCC) and later renamed Harvard Mark I . With help from Grace Hopper and funding from IBM the machine was completed in . In , Aiken completed his work on the Harvard Mark II computer, which was an improvement over the Mark I, but it used electromechanical relays. He spent most of his life improving the Mark I and with all of that time he made the Mark II

14. Howard Aiken: Information From Answers.com
Howard aiken howard Hathaway Aiken is considered one of the pioneers of thecomputer field, being the primary engineer behind IBM s Harvard Mark I.
http://www.answers.com/topic/howard-aiken
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Howard Aiken Wikipedia @import url(http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/css/common.css); @import url(http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/css/gnwp.css); Howard Aiken Howard Hathaway Aiken is considered one of the pioneers of the computer field, being the primary engineer behind IBM 's Harvard Mark I computer. He was born on March 9 in Hoboken, New Jersey and passed away on March 14 in St. Louis, Missouri. He studied at the University of Wisconsin, Madison , and later obtained his Ph.D. in physics at Harvard University in . During this time he encountered differential equations that he could only solve numerically. As such, he envisioned an electro-mechanical computing device that could do much of the tedious work for him. This computer was originally called the Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (ASCC) and later renamed Harvard Mark I . With help from Grace Hopper and funding from IBM the machine was completed in . In , Aiken completed his work on the fully electronic Mark II computer. He spent most of his life improving the Mark I and with all of that time he made the Mark II, Mark III, and the Mark IV.

15. Inventor Of The Week: Archive: Howard Aiken
Howard Aiken the Mark I Computer. Electrical engineer, physicist, and computingpioneer Howard Hathaway Aiken was born in 1900 in Hoboken, New Jersey.
http://web.mit.edu/invent/iow/aiken.html
This Week Inventor Archive Inventor Search Inventor of the Week Archive Browse for a different Invention or Inventor Electrical engineer, physicist, and computing pioneer Howard Hathaway Aiken was born in 1900 in Hoboken, New Jersey. He spent most of his childhood in Indianapolis, Indiana and obtained a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. While he studied, he also worked for the Madison Gas Company. After he graduated, the company promoted him to chief engineer. In 1935, Aiken returned to school and received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1939. He became very interested in computers while working on his doctoral thesis in physics. He had ideas for a machine that could help with difficult calculations. He convinced IBM to fund a project to develop such a machine. A constructing team at Harvard was to use machine components that IBM already had in existence. Meanwhile, in 1942, the Navy had asked Aiken for a system for their Naval Proving Ground. That's when he began work on the Harvard Mark II. This system, which employed an electrical memory, was finished in 1947. One important advance in the second system was the concept of 'constants' - fixed values which are referenced by the program the machine is running. This was a new concept in programming at the time, but it is taken for granted in today's programming languages.

16. Computer Sweden - Sveriges IT-tidning - Dagliga Nyheter Om It, Internet, Datorer
aiken howard Ingen träff.Ingen träff. CS på papper i sommar. Så här kommer CS påpapper ut under sommaren fredag 1 juli - fredag 29 juli
http://computersweden.idg.se/tjanster/sprakwebb/ord.asp?ord=Aiken Howard

17. Informationen über Aiken, Howard Hathaway
Translate this page Informationen über den amerikanischen Ingeneur und Mathematiker aiken howard Hathaway.
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Aiken, Howard Hathaway war ein amerikanischer Ingenieur und Mathematiker, er wurde am 08.03.1900 in New Jersey geboren und verstarb mit 73 Jahren am 14.03.1973 in Missouri. Aiken Howard Hathaway plante bereits Anfang der 30er Jahre an Großrechnern und baute im Auftrag von IBM zwischen 1939 und 1944 den elektromechanischen Computer Mark I, den man nach Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts brachte um ihn für ballistische Berechnungen einzusetzen. Im Jahre 1947 erschien der vollkommen elektrisch arbeitende Mark II, daraufhin der Mark III und Mark IV. Er entwickelte zudem die nach ihm benannte Kodierung, den sogenannten Aiken-Code, ein Verfahren zur binären Kodierung von Dezimalzahlen. © 2003-2004 Alle Texte, Grafiken sowie das Design sind Urheberrechtlich geschützt und dürfen nicht ohne Zustimmung von Bullhost Internet Service weiter verwendet werden. Username
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18. Howard AIKEN
Translate this page aiken howard http//www.ik.fh-hannover.de/person/becher/edvhist/personen/aiken.htm.Text - Layout. Sandra GENSEN - 2002.
http://www.kae.be/abteilungen_unterricht/informatik/computerchronik/cc_personen/
AIKEN Howard
  • 1900: Geburt in Hoboken (USA); Staatsangehörigkeit: USA 1973: Tod 1935: begann mit der Planung eines Großrechners. 1939: In vier Jahren entwickelten er und IBM Ingenieure den ASCC-Computer (Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator). Der ASCC funktionierte elektromechanisch und benötigte für eine Addition sechs Sekunden und für eine Division zwölf Sekunden. Gesteuert wurde er durch Lochbänder. Die Dateneingabe und -ausgabe erfolgte über Lochkarten. 1943: der 35 Tonnen schwere Computer nahm seine Arbeit auf. Eine Hauptaufgabe waren ballistische Berechnungen für die U.S. Marine. 1947: stellte einen Computer, der vollständig elektronisch funktionierte, fertig. 1900: Naissance à Hoboken (USA); nationalité : USA 1935: Début de la conception d' un calculateur 1939: En quatre années, il développe avec les ingénieurs de l'IBM l'ordinateur ASCC (Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator). L' ASCC fonctionnait électromecaniquement et devait avoir six secondes pour une addition et douze secondes pour une division. Il était commandé par des cartes perforées.

19. Aiken Howard Hathaway
Encyklopedia w Wirtualna Polska SA pierwszy portal w Polsce.
http://encyklopedia.wp.pl/sz_tresc.html?encid=2212932

20. CentralWeb - Aiken Howard

http://www.centralweb.fr/dico/def/aiken-howard.htm
Aiken Howard
(1900 - 1973). Mathématicien étasunien ayant travaillé sur certains des premiers ordinateurs de l'histoire, comme l' ASCC d'IBM ou la série des Harvard (voir Harvard Mark II ). Il en avait besoin, car ses travaux l'avaient conduit à rencontrer des systèmes d'équations différentielles qui ne pouvaient être résolus que par des voies numériques. (23-06-2003). PERS
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