THE PROTOTYPE
In the late 1930s, John Atanasoff
was still trying to develop ways to facilitate the process of calculating solutions
to the extended systems of linear algebraic equations that were applicable to
his research work. He became convinced that the digital approach offered considerable
advantages over the slower and less accurate analog machines. In December of 1939,
working with his graduate student Clifford Berry, John Atanasoff developed and
built the prototype of the first electronic digital computer, which would be fully
completed in 1942. This prototype of the first computer included four significant
and entirely novel operating principles in its operation: The binary system, regenerative
data storage, logic circuits as elements of a program, and electronic elements
as data carrying media.
"After the prototype had started working, we were
convinced we could build a computer capable of calculating whatever we would like
to", wrote Atanasoff. Having demonstrated the viability of the four major
principles, the prototype unequivocally opened the way for all present day computers.
In
their history of the ENIAC computer, Alice R. Burks and Arthur W. Burks summarize
the Atanasoff achievement as follows:
"He invented
a new type of a serial storage module, applicable to digital electronic computing.
He formulated, developed and proved the major principles involved in electronic
circuits for digital computing, principles that included arithmetical operations,
control, transition from one to another number base systems, transfer and storage
of data, and synchronized clocking of the operations. Having applied that data
storage and those principles, he constructed a well-balanced electronic computer
with centralized architecture, including storage, and arithmetically controlled
input/output devices. He had invented the first-ever specialized electronic computer
with such a degree of multi-aspect applicability."
The
ABC computer would have been fully operative by 1943, had the efforts of John
Atanasoff and Clifford Berry not been interrupted by World War II. In September
of 1942, Atanasoff was conscripted into the military and was forced to set aside
his work on the computer. He began working at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory (NOL),
a research laboratory at the Armed Forces Ordnance Administration, where, as a
theoretical physicist, he was put in charge of testing acoustic mines, depth charges,
and other similar projects. From 1942 to 1966, Atanasoff's scientific research
centered on the dynamic principles of naval ships. During this time, he patented
more than 30 devices, including the first mine-sweeping unit for blowing up hydrodynamic
naval mines; instruments for detection and recording of high amplitude seismic
and sonic waves; a unit computing and recording projectile trajectory errors in
artillery shelling; postal sorting systems; automated systems for parcel post
handling; quick search systems for classified information items; and an electronic
quartz clock. Simultaneously, he worked on several developments related to national
defense and naval armament systems, including work on guided missiles.
In 1945
John Atanasoff dedicated the results of his innovative professional work to a
number of governmental and industrial projects. He also established two successful
companies and served each simultaneously as chief executive.
A significant
event had occurred in 1941, when Atanasoff received a colleague, John W. Mauchly,
into his home as a guest. Mauchly had expressed great interest in the work Atanasoff
was doing relating to computer technology and had enthusiastically accepted Atanasoff's
invitation. It is important to ask exactly what transpired during this visit between
Atanasoff and Mauchly, since the events that resulted from the time they spent
together are now etched in history. The facts were examined in detail at a judicial
hearing 26 years later, when the courts had to decide whether John W. Mauchly
and John P. Eckert had unlawfully made use of Atanasoff's invention when they
developed the ENIAC computer between 1942 and 1946. Before this time, the ENIAC
had been recognized as the first electronic computer, but the facts of the case
would prove otherwise. The following facts were established during the court hearings:
1.
J. Mauchly had stayed as a guest at Atanasoff's home in Ames from June 13 to June
18, 1941.
2. During that stay, Mauchly spent many hours discussing the Atanasoff-Berry
computer and computer theory with John Atanasoff and Cliff Berry.
3. For three
or four days, Mauchly accompanied Atanasoff to his office in the physics building
at Iowa State University and observed the Atanasoff-Berry computer in the presence
of both Atanasoff and Berry.
4. Mauchly had also watched demonstrations of
the operations of the computer, or at least viewed some phases of the Atanasoff-Berry
computer functioning. Mauchly may also have been engaged in the manipulation of
some parts of the computer in the company of Clifford Berry.
5. Mauchly was
allowed to read 35 pages of a manuscript describing the design and operation of
the Atanasoff-Berry computer. Atanasoff and Berry had benevolently answered all
of Mauchly's questions and had conducted many detailed discussions with him related
to the computer and the manuscript. Atanasoff had, however, rejected Mauchly's
request to take a copy of the manuscript with him to Pennsylvania.
6. Immediately
after meeting with Atanasoff in June, Mauchly had written letters to both Atanasoff
and to another friend, Helms Clayton, expressing his enthusiasm for the Atanasoff-Berry
computer. Mauchly subsequently attended a crash course in electronics at Pennsylvania
University.
7. On August 15, 1941, Mauchly wrote a comprehensive summary of
the differences between analog and digital computing devices. The summary included
ideas that were almost identical to those found in Atanasoff's manuscript relating
to the Atanasoff-Berry computer.
8. On September 30, 1941, Mauchly wrote to
Atanasoff, proposing that the two of them develop a computer jointly. Mauchly
also asked whether Atanasoff would mind if he used some of Atanasoff's ideas in
a computer that he himself was intending to build.
On October 19, 1973, Judge
Earl R. Larson made public his ruling on the ENIAC case. According to the US statutory
judicial procedure, Justice Larson issued a court ruling on the merits of the
evidence, a summation, and a court verdict, which resulted in a total of 420 pages
of material. The court verdict said: "With this Verdict the Court has ruled
that the Patent of ENIAC - US Patent, Serial No. 3 120 606, issued to the Illinois
Scientific Developments Incorporated, is hereby declared null and void."
Thus,
the US Patent of what had been considered the first digital computer in history
was declared null and void. The significance of the judge's ruling, which was
based on a chronological examination of the events, provided irrefutable proof
of the great achievement made by Atanasoff and Berry in developing an electronic
digital computer before December 1940. Judge Larson noted that the advanced stage
of the Atanasoff-Berry computer was established beyond reasonable doubt, and that
it was not just an opinion on behalf of Atanasoff or the Administration officials
of the State of Iowa, but the learned opinion of independent experts. These experts
had made their own observations and tests of the Atanasoff - Berry Computer in
addition to reviewing the research and development plans that Atanasoff had produced
in the period between 1939 and 1942.
The Federal Judge ruled that Mauchly derived
the basic ideas for an electronic digital computer from the Atanasoff-Berry computer.
He also ruled that John Atanasoff and Clifford Berry were the first to have constructed
an electronic digital computer at the Iowa State College in the years between
1939 and 1942. In addition, the judge ruled that John Mauchly and John Eckert,
who had for over 25 years been the recipients of recognition and admiration as
co-inventors of the first electronic digital computer, had, in fact, lost all
rights to the patent upon which all of the praise had been based. "Eckert
and Mauchly had not invented the first automated electronic digital computer,
but had derived the basic ideas for it by John Atanasoff." (Excerpt of the
Summation of the Court in Minneapolis, 1973).
ATANASOFF
RECOGNIZED AS THE FATHER OF THE COMPUTER!
In 1970 John Atanasoff was
invited to Bulgaria by the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, and the Bulgarian Government
conferred to him the Cyrille and Methodius Order of Merit First Class. This was
his first public recognition, and it was awarded to him three years before similar
honors were conferred to him in the United States. The credit for this timely
recognition of Atanasoff's achievement should be given to the Bulgarian academicians,
Blaghovest Sendov, Ph.D. and Kyrille Boyannov, Ph.D., among others.
During
his lifetime, the highest honor and recognition awarded to John Vincent Atanasoff,
the Father of the Computer, was the National Medal of Science and Technology,
conferred to him by George M. Bush in 1990