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| | UNIVAC Memories |
 | | The first computer I ever used was a UNIVAC 1107, and for more than a decade stretching from 1967 through 1978, most of my programming was oriented toward those machines, spanning four generations of hardware: the 1107, 1108, 1110, and 1100/80 (which I used briefly to develop microprocessor software). |  | | In September of 1967 I wrote my first computer program and ran it on this machine. |  | | Nothing better illustrates what could be accomplished with the rather odd UNIVAC 1100 instruction set than this program, which edits a 36-bit number into a 12 digit octal string in exactly 12 instructions, with no loops. |
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http://www.fourmilab.ch/documents/univac
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| | The Case 1107 |
 | | Fortunately, students in the "open shop" environment in which the 1107 operated quickly learned how to field-strip the card reader and remove the remains of their programming projects when this happened. |  | | Visible through the window at the end of the keypunch room is the computer room, with the UNIVAC 1004 card reader/punch and printer unit in the foreground. |  | | Operated by the Andrew R. Jennings Computing Center, the "Seven" enticed a generation into the world of computing and, with the innovative "fast turnaround batch," "open shop" access pioneered at Case, provided a standard of service to a large community of users almost unheard of at the time. |
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http://www.fourmilab.ch/documents/univac/case1107.html
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| | UNIVAC 1107 |
 | | The UNIVAC 1107 was the first member of Sperry Rand 's UNIVAC 1100 series of computers, introduced in October 1962. |  | | Also known as the Thin Film Computer because of its use of thin film magnetic memory for its register storage. |
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http://www.websign.sk/un/UNIVAC_1107.html
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| | List of Univac products |
 | | A history of Univac computers and Operating Systems |  | | UNIVAC 494-MAPS - The first Multi-Associated Processor System - not made available commercially |  | | AN/USQ-20 the Navy Tactical Data System (NTDS), UNIVAC 1206, or G-40 |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/l/li/list_of_univac_products.html
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| | Carl Hammer Papers |
 | | UNIVAC European Computing Center- Press Release, October 1956. |  | | UNIVAC- Mimic- A Digital Simulator Program, May 1965. |  | | UNIVAC Symposium on Computers in Education and Research, Saint-Paul-de-Vence, France, 10-12 November 1981. |
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http://www.cbi.umn.edu/collections/inv/cbi00003.html
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| | UNIVAC 1107 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | UNIVAC 1100 series of computers, introduced in October 1962. |  | | Also known as the Thin Film Computer because of its use of |  | | The UNIVAC 1107 was the first member of Sperry Rand 's |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNIVAC_1107
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| | Univac |
 | | I designed and implemented software to generate histograms to anticipate system failures. |  | | I wrote a real-time program to monitor troublesome communication lines for the Univac General Communication Subsystem in assembler. |
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http://www.eagle.ca/~harry/work/univac.htm
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| | The Machine Room :: Univac :: 1107 :: Links |
 | | The Machine Room :: Univac :: 1107 :: Links |  | | Search Google or Ebay United States for Univac 1107 ( more links, auctions and searches) |  | | Web architecture, design, implementation and security by alexios { IT Consulting Services }. |
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http://www.machine-room.org/computers/8208/links.html
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| | 02HISTORYCD-Index |
 | | UNIVAC 1 - Full View - B (1951) |  | | UNIVAC 1 - Full View - A (1951) |  | | UNISYS Printer and Tape Drive (for mainframe) (1990s) |
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http://www.computermuseum.li/Testpage/02HISTORYCD-Index.htm
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| | UNIVAC-1107 |
 | | The UNIVAC 1107 was produced by the Remington Rand Univac Division of the Sperry Rand Corporation, New York, New York |
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http://www.computermuseum.li/Testpage/UNIVAC-1107.htm
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