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Washington, D.C., circa 1920. One of half a dozen images labeled "Tabulating Machine Co." Harris & Ewing Collection glass negative. View full size.
Likely two operations going on here - punching and then verifying. When I worked in an IBM environment in the sixties we had a room with a lot fewer ladies who did exactly that - punch and verify.
The ladies are not doing computing, they are doing data entry. They are using an early version of an IBM keypunch (numerics only). The lady at the near end of the fourth row is checking her work.
These machines are 10-key card punches of the old style as shown on this page (scroll to the center).
These are card punch machines, not adding machines. Adding machines of this time period had a lot more mechanical stuff to them. These machines just punch holes in the Hollerith cards. The machinery at the back of the room does all the adding up work.
You know, the movie with Phyllis Diller? I wonder which one is going to lose it... My guess is the one in the front row looking straight into the camera.
Rows A through F first, ten minutes please
Hahaha!! Loved the CPU architecture reference. I seriously wonder, how many cycles per second (Hertz) or IPS a human cluster like this would do as a whole. Did they measure efficiency by calculations per minute, as in words per minute for typists?
Herman Hollerith founded the Tabulating Machine Co. in 1896 in Georgetown. The building still stands, with a commemorative plaque. In 1924 it merged with three other companies to become IBM.
Until the 1960's and the advent of the electronic calculator, groups of women like this -- it was a women's occupation -- performed calculations on mechanical calculators. The women were, in fact, called computers.
Herman Hollerith introduced tabulating machines and punched card tabulating systems to the census in 1890 and they were used through at least 1940. Later known as IBM cards.
I'm sitting here and can't believe my lying eyes. One or two of these gals are not heinous. I better take a break, and look again.
about tabulators versus computers, but, as with most of these early office photos, the men in this one seem to be standing around looking good while the women work their nimble fingers to the bone. All that is missing is a whip and a chair! Thank goodness, they've come a long way, baby.
Am I imagining things, or is this office space a converted parking garage? I love the hat and coat storage up on the ramp!
Although we may look at this group and declare them "obsolete", I was in S.F. last summer and made some purchases in Chinatown. Without exception, each purchase was figured out on an abacus. These comptometers or adding machines are actually based on that device as the abacus is the forerunner of these machines. Everything old is new again.
In 1920, I believe those people would have been called - Computers.
Seriously.
Looks like they have a register file of seven 8-bit registers - the last 2 rows are the stack register (with extra parity bits) and status register. The I-cache operators are standing by in the back to the left, while the 2 D-cache operators are standing in the back to the right (with there kilobytes of storage). Looks like there are a few bad bits (staring at the camera) that will cause a timing violation. Where's the boundary scan?
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