July 16, 2001
In 1950, the computer industry was only 4 years old. But the patterns that would define the new industry already were settling into place: the accelerated rate of change, the entrepreneurial start-ups, the battles between the visionaries and the businessmen, the intense competition to be faster, smaller, cheaper. The activity of the nascent industry of 1950 bore a striking resemblance to today's more mature industry.
As further evidence of the industry's growing influence, Time magazine featured an anthropomorphized computer on a cover, along with the question, "Can man build a superman?" Only four years earlier, the first electronic computer, the ENIAC (Electrical Numerical Integrator and Calculator) had been unveiled. In 1950, a small company in Philadelphia, launched by the ENIAC's inventors -- J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly -- was well on its way toward completing a new, faster computer called the Univac (Universal Automatic Computer). It would use magnetic-tape storage to replace punched data cards and printers to list the content of the tape.
Within two short years, Univac would become synonymous with computer the way Kleenex is synonymous with facial tissue. But just as Eckert and Mauchly's company, EMCC, was on the verge of success in 1950, with three customers lined up and development nearly finished, it found itself in trouble. The tale of the fledgling firm's fate contains some details that would reappear many times in the industry. Most notably, the two men were hurt by a lack of business skills. Moreover, they lost their main financial backer in a plane crash.
Eckert, named in 1982 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. as the engineer of the century, was clearly the engineering muscle behind the ENIAC and the Univac. But Mauchly was the visionary, the dreamer who in many ways foreshadowed the Silicon Valley visionaries who were to follow 30 years later.
"Mauchly was the kind of guy who thought with his mouth open," says his widow, Kay Mauchly Antonelli, who became one of the world's first computer programmers when she worked on the ENIAC ["Mothers of Invention," CW, Nov. 16]. "He was at the forefront of ideas about machine language. He was a dreamer."
The military drove the development of the earliest computers such as the ENIAC, seeking faster, more accurate ways to perform mathematical and scientific calculations. Mauchly was among the first to see the computer as more than a high-powered calculator. He envisioned general-purpose computers that could be employed to solve a variety of business problems.
But Mauchly was an idea man, not a businessman. After EMCC lost its backer, American Totalisator Vice President Henry Strauss, near the end of 1949, it was forced to court suitors who might acquire the firm.
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