Core Memory Collection

My Photographs

A selection of pictures from Computer History Museum

ILLIAC IV 1975 University of Illinois/Burroughs Corporation, United States In 1966, Daniel Slotnik began designing the ILLIAC IV to incorporate 256 processors, each of which would execute the same instruction on different data (SIMD). Burroughs Corporation began construction of the machine at the University of Illinois, but moved the project to the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California, in 1971 due in part to fears involving the project’s military-based funding and student unrest over the Vietnam War. Although only 64 processors were built, the computer performed useful work, such as wind tunnel simulation, seismic studies, and image processing, until it was decommissioned in 1982. Memory Type: Semi Speed: 75 MFLOPS Memory Size: 16M Cost: $31,000,000 Memory Width: (64-bit)

Mark Richards