James A Saxon has written:
'Programming the IBM 1401, a self-instructional programmed manual [by] James A. Saxon [and] William S. Plette' -- subject(s): IBM 1401 (Computer), Programming
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The National Computer Center of Nepal had an IBM 1401 at least several years before 1978. It was use for many purposes including census and Royal Nepal Airlines. It was certainly the first large computer used there.
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2ng generation. It used transistors and magnetic core memory
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That depends on which computer character set you are talking about as there are several (and there were many more in the early days, before things were standardized).
A few examples are given in the following table:
Character Set Letter "A" ASCII 1000001 EBCDIC 11000001 Fieldata 000110 UNIVAC I 010100 IBM 1620 0100 0001 IBM 1401 110001 IBM 650 01 01000 00 00001 Hollerith 100100000000 Baudot 00011
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Leeland R. O'Neal has written:
'Autocoder programming for the IBM 1400 seriescomputers' -- subject(s): Programmed instruction, IBM 1401 (Computer), Programming, Autocoder (Computer program language), Autocoder (Computer programlanguage)
'Electronic data processing systems' -- subject(s): Programmed instruction, Electronic data processing
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Zhu Yunwen, known as Jianwen Emperor, ruled China in 1401. He was Emperor of China from 1398 to 1402.
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A load and go compiler. These were popular on medium sized transistorized computers in the early 1960s but have become obsolete. Two examples were the 60+ pass FORTRAN II compiler for the IBM 1401 w/ 8000 or more characters of memory and GOTRAN (a FORTRAN subset) on the IBM 1620 and other computers.
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Santa Barbara - 1984 1-1401 was released on:
USA: 20 February 1990
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Days of Our Lives - 1965 1-1401 was released on:
USA: 25 May 1971
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IBM oldest computer company
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The (transistor) switches in an electronic computer, have only two states, ON and OFF.
Binary has only two numbers 1 and 0.
Large numbers can be represented by digits (bytes), made up entirely of ones and zeros.
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IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
IBM introduced the PC AT in 1984, not 1994.
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