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Language peer sets for SEESAW: United States↑ United States/1954↑ Designed 1954 ↑ 1950s languages ↑ Second generation↑ Early Cold War↑ Genus Low-level Autocoders ↑ Multi-purpose ↑ Low-level Autocoders↑ Autocoders↑ US historic algorithmic systems ↑ Low-level Autocoders/1954↑ Autocoders/1954↑ US historic algorithmic systems/1954↑ Low-level Autocoders/United States↑ Autocoders/United States↑ US historic algorithmic systems/United States↑ Multi-purpose ↑ Multi-purpose/1954↑ Multi-purpose/us ↑ SEESAW(ID:115/see001)Autocode for the IBM 701alternate simple viewCountry: United States Designed 1954 Published: 1954 Genus: Low-level Autocoders Sammet category: Multi-purpose Early automatic coding system on IBM 701, mentioned by Hopper as an example in her NPL lecture, but otherwise obscure. One possibility is that it was an autocode developed for the U.S. Navy Communications Supplementary Activity in Washington (Nicknamed "Seesaw" because of its initials, CSAW). They were heavy early users of computing, and the technical team left en bloc to become ERA (which then became a part of Sperry, and Norris then led the team away to become CDC) Hardware:
References: in the High Speed Computer Conference, Louisiana Stat (1955) the High Speed Computer Conference, Louisiana State University, 16 Feb. 1955, Remington Rand, Inc. 1955 in the High Speed Computer Conference, Louisiana Stat (1955) the High Speed Computer Conference, Louisiana State University, 16 Feb. 1955, Remington Rand, Inc. 1955 in the High Speed Computer Conference, Louisiana Stat (1955) the High Speed Computer Conference, Louisiana State University, 16 Feb. 1955, Remington Rand, Inc. 1955 in [ACM] (1959) [ACM] CACM 2(05) May 1959 in [ACM] (1963) [ACM] CACM 6(03) (Mar 1963) Search in: Google Google scholar World Cat Yahoo Overture DBLP Monash bib NZ IEEE  ACM portal CiteSeer CSB ncstrl jstor Bookfinder |