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Early electronic computer produced in 1949
BINAC (Binary Automatic Computer) is an early electronic computer that was designed for Northrop Aircraft Company by the Eckert–Mauchly Computer Corporation
BINAC
Topics referred to by the same term
Binac may refer to: Binač, a village in Kosovo BINAC, a 1949 computer This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Binac. If an internal
Binac
American company
allowed BINAC to sit, disassembled, in their parking lot for a long time before any effort toward assembly was made. As had happened with BINAC, EMCC's
Eckert–Mauchly Computer Corporation
Eckert–Mauchly_Computer_Corporation
Serbian Orthodox monastery near Viti, Kosovo
Svetih arhangela Mihaila i Gavrila), also known as Binač Monastery (Манастир Бинач/Manastir Binač), or Buzovik (Бузовик), was a Serbian medieval Eastern
Binač_Monastery
American computer programmer (1924–2011)
computer of its kind. After her work on ENIAC, Bartik went on to work on BINAC and UNIVAC, and spent time at a variety of technical companies as a writer
Jean_Bartik
First commercial electronic computer
commercial digital computer by the BINAC and the Z4, the Z4 was electromechanical and lacked software programmability, while BINAC never operated successfully
Ferranti_Mark_1
Village in Gjilan, Kosovo
Binač (Serbian Cyrillic: Бинaч) or Binça (Albanian: Binçë), is a village in the municipality of Viti in southeastern Kosovo. The Binač Monastery was destroyed
Binça
First general-purpose computer designed for business application (1951)
used with the BINAC. The Short Code was later tested on the UNIVAC I in early 1950. Meanwhile, in September 1949, by the time the BINAC was delivered
UNIVAC_I
River in Kosovo, North Macedonia and Serbia
Morava e Binçës is a river which flows in Kosovo, Serbia and North Macedonia. The river has a basin size of 1,564 km2 (604 sq mi) and a length of 60 km
Morava_e_Binçës
German 1940s computer
months and the UNIVAC I by ten months, but in turn being beaten by the BINAC (although that never worked at the customer's site). Other computers, all
Z4_(computer)
German computer scientist and engineer (1910–1995)
the second computer in the world to be sold or loaned, beaten only by the BINAC, which never worked properly after it was delivered. Other computers, all
Konrad_Zuse
American physicist and computer scientist (1907–1980)
the first general-purpose electronic digital computer, as well as EDVAC, BINAC and UNIVAC I, the first commercial computer made in the United States. Together
John_Mauchly
English mathematician and computer scientist (1921–2019)
the BINAC and the Z4, BINIAC was not designed as a general purpose computer and it was never used for its intended purpose,"Description of the BINAC", citing
Conway_Berners-Lee
Series of mainframe computer models
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. That company first built a computer called BINAC (BINary Automatic Computer) for Northrop Aviation (which was little used
UNIVAC
First electronic general-purpose digital computer
help design the first commercial electronic computers, the UNIVAC and the BINAC, alongside Jean Jennings. McNulty developed the use of subroutines in order
ENIAC
Valley in Kosovo
Anamorava (Albanian: Anamoravë), or Kosovo Pomoravlje (Serbian: Косовско Поморавље / Kosovsko Pomoravlje, "Morava Valley of Kosovo"), is a valley in Kosovo
Anamorava
Early higher-level language for electronic computers
Code. William Schmitt implemented a version of Brief Code in 1949 for the BINAC computer, though it was never debugged and tested. The following year Schmitt
Short Code (computer language)
Short_Code_(computer_language)
American manufacturing company (1927–1955)
Retrieved June 6, 2026. The first commercial computer in the world was the BINAC built by the Eckert–Mauchly Computer Corporation and delivered to Northrop
Remington_Rand
Computer architecture where code and data share a common bus
September 16, 1948, running a program by Adele Goldstine for von Neumann. The BINAC ran some test programs in February, March, and April 1949, although was
Von_Neumann_architecture
American ICBM
expensive and not very reliable. Earlier efforts to use computers for guidance, BINAC and the system on the SM-64 Navaho, had failed and were abandoned. The Air
LGM-30_Minuteman
American computer scientist (1917–2001)
Holberton worked with John Mauchly to develop the C-10 instruction set for BINAC, which is considered to be the prototype of all modern programming languages
Betty_Holberton
Vacuum-tube computer system
Washington, D.C. (1955) Dupont Central Research, Wilmington, DE (1954) BINAC, first commercially available computer Ferranti Mark 1, first working commercially
IBM_701
Data input device
keypunch device as both the input and paper-based output device, and the BINAC computer made use of an electromechanically controlled typewriter for both
Computer_keyboard
American electrical engineer and computer pioneer (1919–1995)
the Electronic Control Company which built the Binary Automatic Computer (BINAC). One of the major advances of this machine, which was used from August
J._Presper_Eckert
switches to physically rewire a machine; worked with John Mauchly toward BINAC (1949), EDVAC (1949), UNIVAC (1951) to develop early stored program computers
List_of_computer_scientists
Cultural heritage monument of Kosovo
Stubllavaçë, the same source used for Saint Anthony of Padua’s church in Binač. The façade stones are sloped and tinted gray, and the edifice is topped
Saint_Joseph's_Church,_Viti
Topics referred to by the same term
Valley (Kosovo Pomoravlje), or Binač Morava Valley (Binač Pomoravlje), a geographical area in Kosovo around the Binač Morava Pomoravlje District, a district
Pomoravlje
Type of computer
until August 1949. It began actual operation (on a limited basis) in 1951. BINAC, delivered to a customer on 22 August 1949. It worked at the factory but
Stored-program_computer
the UNIVAC I, the first commercially available computer. Also worked on BINAC (1949), EDVAC (1949), UNIVAC (1951) with Grace Hopper and Jean Bartik, to
List of pioneers in computer science
List_of_pioneers_in_computer_science
Irish–American computer programmer (1921–2006)
McNulty worked on the software design for later computers including the BINAC and UNIVAC I computers whose hardware was designed by her husband. John
Kathleen_Antonelli
Town and municipality in Gjilan, Kosovo
and commander of the KLA. Liridon Krasniqi, footballer Marko Sopi, from Binač, Catholic prelate. Milaim Rama, footballer Muharrem Sahiti, from Budrikë
Viti,_Kosovo
Computer with a bit-serial architecture
on N-bit data widths, but does so a single bit at a time. EDVAC (1949) BINAC (1949) SEAC (1950) UNIVAC I (1951) Elliott Brothers Elliott 152[citation
Serial_computer
Type of written communication
the first computational technical document, an instruction manual for the BINAC computer. The invention of the transistor in 1947 allowed computers to be
Technical_writing
Intelligence BIA—Business impact analysis BiDi—Bi-Directional bin—binary BINAC—Binary Automatic Computer BIND—Berkeley Internet Name Domain BIOS—Basic
List of computing and IT abbreviations
List_of_computing_and_IT_abbreviations
Catholic Albanians expelled between 1846 and 1847 in Gjilan
compatriots and ancestors - he is a native of this area, from the town of Binač. "NË STUBLLAVAQË GJURMËVE TË MARTIRËVE TË KARADAKUT". www.drita.info. 14
Expulsion_of_Karadak
programmed punched card calculators (prototyped 1950) UNIVAC I (via EMCC's BINAC) UNIVAC 1103 (via ERA's 1101) NCR 1952 1953: Electronics Division Cash registers
IBM_and_the_Seven_Dwarfs
Topics referred to by the same term
river in central Serbia, and its tributaries: South Morava (Južna Morava) Binač Morava (Binačka Morava) West Morava (Zapadna Morava) Morava (river), a river
Morava
First generation programmable computers
replica being built at The National Museum of Computing, Bletchley Park. BINAC 1949 1 700 : 0 First stored-program computer to be sold, but it did not
List_of_vacuum-tube_computers
United States John Presper Eckert and John William Mauchly construct the BINAC for Northrop. 1949 May 6 United Kingdom Maurice Wilkes and a team at Cambridge
Timeline of computing before 1950
Timeline_of_computing_before_1950
severely damaged, later renovated St. Archangel Gabriel's Monastery in Binač (14th century), completely destroyed by explosive on 13 December Church
Destruction of Serbian heritage in Kosovo
Destruction_of_Serbian_heritage_in_Kosovo
or tradition. The most prominent ones are listed below. Binačka Morava (Binač Morava), 49 km Lepenica, 48 km Skrapež, 48 km Galovica, 47 km Kalenićka
List_of_rivers_of_Serbia
American horse racing executive
work that John W. Mauchly and Presper Eckert were doing with the EDVAC and BINAC computers. Straus became convinced that electronic computers had enormous
Harry_L._Straus
Diocese of the Serbian Orthodox Church
14th c.) Gorioč (early 14th c.) Sokolica (14th c.) Budisavci (14th c.) Binač (14th c.) Devič (1434) Saint Mark of Koriša (1467) Church of the Holy Apostles
Eparchy_of_Raška_and_Prizren
the first general purpose electronic digital computer, as well as EDVAC, BINAC and UNIVAC I, the first commercial computer made in the United States; while
List of Ursinus College people
List_of_Ursinus_College_people
American industrialist (1886–1968)
computer in 1946. They founded Eckert–Mauchly in 1947, and developed the BINAC computer shortly thereafter. Remington Rand purchased the company in March
James_Rand_Jr.
positive, zero, or negative voltage. An early project for the U.S. Air Force, BINAC attempted to make a lightweight, simple computer by using binary arithmetic
History of general-purpose CPUs
History_of_general-purpose_CPUs
Albanian prelate
an Albanian prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. Mark Sopi was born in Binač, Vitina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia (modern Kosovo) on 26 February 1938. From
Mark_Sopi
cores to share data to manage inter-thread dependent data. 3Server Apulet BINAC Intel Research on Speculative Multithreading Coverage of Core Multiplexing
Core_Multiplexing_Technology
Award conferred by the IEEE Computer Society
co-leading the first teams of ENIAC programmers, and pioneering work on BINAC and UNIVAC I Edward J. McCluskey Design and synthesis of digital systems
Computer_Pioneer_Award
(Albanian) Name (Serbian) Coordinates Ballancë Balance Beguncë Begunce Binça Binač Budrikë e Epërme Gornja Budrika Buzovik Buzovik Çifllak Čiflak Debelldeh
List of populated places in Kosovo
List_of_populated_places_in_Kosovo
construction projects in the late 1940s and early 1950s, including EDSAC, BINAC, UNIVAC, CALDIC, SEAC and SWAC, the IAS machine, and the Whirlwind. The
Moore_School_Lectures
Cultural heritage monument of Kosovo
removed from this church and moved to the church of Saint Anthony of Padua in Binač. The church in is a prime location, with a churchyard reaching down toward
Saint_Anne's_Church,_Dunav
can pass its results to the next APU. Core Multiplexing Technology CPGA BINAC Virtual Machines, Cell's "apulets" and the future of connected computing
Apulet
BINAC
BINAC
BINAC
BINAC
Girl/Female
Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sindhi, Telugu
Virtuous Woman
Boy/Male
Tamil
Diamond
Boy/Male
Hebrew American Swedish Biblical Spanish
Gift from God.
Girl/Female
Irish
Ancient.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Fit, Clever, Capable
Girl/Female
British, English
Elf; Power
Girl/Female
Indian
Extra ordinary
Boy/Male
Tamil
Conqueror
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit
Created
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Sell 1.German : from Middle High German, Middle Low German selle ‘friend’, ‘companion’.French : habitational name from any of the various places called Selle, Selles, or La Selle, named with Latin cella ‘cell’, ‘cot’, ‘hut’, ‘stall’.Dutch (Van Selle) : habitational name for someone from Zelle in Herenthout, Antwerp.A Selle (or De Selle) from the Burgundy region of France was documented in Montreal in 1729.
BINAC
BINAC
BINAC
BINAC
BINAC