The Analogue Alternative: The Electronic Analogue Computer in Britain and the USA, 1930-1975We are in the midst of a digital revolution - until recently, the majority of appliances used in everyday life have been developed with analogue technology. Now, either at home or out and about, we are surrounded by digital technology such as digital 'film', audio systems, computers and telephones. From the late 1940s until the 1970s, analogue technology was a genuine alternative to digital, and the two competing technologies ran parallel with each other. During this period, a community of engineers, scientists, academics and businessmen continued to develop and promote the analogue computer. At the height of the Cold War, this community and its technology met with considerable success in meeting the urgent demand for high speed computing for use in the design and simulation of rockets, aircraft and manned space vehicles. The Analogue Alternative tracks the development, commercialisation and ultimate decline of the electronic analogue computer in the USA and Britain. It examines the roles played by technical, economic and cultural factors in the competition between the alternative technologies, but more importantly, James Small demonstrates that non-technical factors, such as the role of 'military enterprise' and the working practices of analogue engineers, have been the most crucial in analogue's demise.^l This book will be of interest to students of the history and sociology of science and technology, particularly computing. It will also be relevant to those interested in technical change and innovation, and the study of scientific cultures. |
Contents
1 Introduction | 1 |
2 Analogue computing devices in the 19th and early 20th centuries | 29 |
3 The origins form and function of electronic analogue devices and computers 19371950 | 63 |
Military programmes aeronautics and electronics | 85 |
the electronic and hybrid computer industry in the USA 19451975 | 119 |
6 The origins commercialisation and decline of electronic analogue and hybrid computing in Britain 19451975 | 179 |
7 Electronic analogue computers and engineering culture | 225 |
the analogue versus digital debate | 245 |
9 Conclusion | 271 |
Bibliography | 279 |
| 308 | |
| 309 | |
Other editions - View all
The Analogue Alternative: The Electronic Analogue Computer in Britain and ... James S. Small No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
Aeronautical Aircraft American analogue and digital analogue and hybrid analogue computer community analogue computer development analogue computer systems analogue computing devices analogue computing equipment analogue devices analogue/hybrid computer analysis Anon applications Atlas missile Beckman Instruments Britain British British Aircraft Corporation Cambridge Comcor commercial complex components computer installations computing facility Control Systems D. R. Hartree DC operational amplifiers differential analyzer differential equations digital computer dynamic systems elec Electrical Engineering electronic analogue computer Electronic Associates Inc English Electric established firms fully transistorised GEDA general-purpose analogue computer general-purpose electronic analogue GPEAC guided missile Guided Weapons Hartree History of Computing hybrid computer hybrid computer systems Laboratory logue computer machine Manchester manufacture mathematical Navy network analyzers op-amp operational amplifiers problems Proc programme Project Cyclone puter REAC Science Scientific Servomechanism Simulation Council Solartron solution solve speed technical techniques Technology and Culture tronic analogue computer Typhoon users ΕΑΙ


