Computer Science, asked by chamlingdhanmaya, 7 months ago

write the features of MARK-1​

Answers

Answered by kashishparshionikar
31

Answer:

Mark I was enourmous in size, measuring 8 feet high, 51 feet long and three feet deep. It weighed 5 tons, used 530 miles of wire and 730,000 separate parts. The operation of these parts was powered and synchronized by a long horizontal rotating shaft. A four horsepower engine drives the mechanical parts.

Answered by Sahil3459
1

Answer:

MARK-1 was created by International Business Machines Corporation (IBM), a worldwide technology company with its headquarters in Armonk, New York.

Explanation:

MARK-1 stands for Microtubule Affinity-Regulating Kinase 1. The enormous Mark I was 8 feet tall, 51 feet long, and three feet deep. It had 730,000 different parts, 530 miles of wire, and a weight of 5 tons. A long horizontal rotating shaft provided power and synchronisation for the operation of these components. The mechanical components are propelled by a four-horsepower engine. When it was first installed in Cambridge in 1944, IBM's Mark I was known as the "Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator" and was frequently termed the "Harvard Calculator." As its replacement machines were created, it started to be referred to as Mark I. The original Mark I was 51 feet long and five tons in weight. Howard Aiken, a graduate student at Harvard, came up with the idea and designed it in 1937.

Thus, among the first electromechanical computers was the Harvard Mark 1. It performed calculations automatically using drive shafts, switches, and punched tape.

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