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The MADDIDA (Magnetic Drum
Digital Differential Analyzer A digital differential analyzer (DDA), also sometimes called a digital integrating computer, is a digital implementation of a differential analyzer. The integrators in a DDA are implemented as accumulators, with the numeric result converted back ...
) was a special-purpose digital computer used for solving systems of
ordinary differential equations In mathematics, an ordinary differential equation (ODE) is a differential equation whose unknown(s) consists of one (or more) function(s) of one variable and involves the derivatives of those functions. The term ''ordinary'' is used in contrast w ...
. It was the first computer to represent bits using voltage levels and whose entire logic was specified in Boolean algebra. Invented by
Floyd Steele Floyd George Steele (June 28, 1918 – September 23, 1995) was an American physicist, engineer, and computer designer who grew up in Boulder, Colorado. He is known for leading the design team at Northrup that developed the MADIDDA, an early digi ...
, MADDIDA was developed at
Northrop Aircraft Corporation Northrop Grumman Corporation is an American multinational aerospace and defense technology company. With 90,000 employees and an annual revenue in excess of $30 billion, it is one of the world's largest weapons manufacturers and military techn ...
between 1946 and 1949 to be used as a guidance system for the Snark missile. No guidance system, however, resulted from the work on the MADDIDA, and rather it was used for aeronautical research. In 1952, the MADDIDA became the world's top-selling commercial digital computer (albeit a special-purpose machine), six units having been sold. (The general-purpose UNIVAC I delivered its seventh unit in 1954.)


Development

Development on the project began in March 1946 at Northrop Corporation with the goal of producing a subsonic cruise missile designated "MX-775", which came to be called the Snark. Northrop's parameters for this project were to create a guidance system that would allow a missile to hit a target at a distance of up to with a precision that would be better than the German "vengeance" weapons V1 and V2. However, the MADDIDA was never used in weaponry, and Northrop ultimately used a different analog computer as the guidance system for the Snark missile. Part of the project parameters involved developing the first digital data analyzer (DIDA). Physicist
Floyd Steele Floyd George Steele (June 28, 1918 – September 23, 1995) was an American physicist, engineer, and computer designer who grew up in Boulder, Colorado. He is known for leading the design team at Northrup that developed the MADIDDA, an early digi ...
, who had reportedly in 1946 already demonstrated a working DIDA before the press in 1946 in his Los Angeles home, was hired as conceptual leader of the design group. Steele developed the concept for the DIDA, which would entail implementing an analog computer using only digital elements. When the decision was made to use magnetic drum memory (MAD) for the DIDA, the name was lengthened to MADDIDA (pronounced "Mad Ida"). In his design for MADDIDA, Steele was influenced by the analog computer invented in 1927 by Vannevar Bush, which had digital components. Another influence was Lord Kelvin's
tide-predicting machine A tide-predicting machine was a special-purpose mechanical analog computer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, constructed and set up to predict the ebb and flow of sea tides and the irregular variations in their heights – which chan ...
, an analog computer completed in 1873. Steele hired Donald Eckdahl, Hrant (Harold) Sarkinssian, and Richard Sprague to work on the MADDIDA's
germanium Germanium is a chemical element with the symbol Ge and atomic number 32. It is lustrous, hard-brittle, grayish-white and similar in appearance to silicon. It is a metalloid in the carbon group that is chemically similar to its group neighbors s ...
diode logic circuits and also to do magnetic recording. Together, this group developed the MADDIDA prototype between 1946 and 1949.


Design

The MADDIDA had 44
integrator An integrator in measurement and control applications is an element whose output signal is the time integral of its input signal. It accumulates the input quantity over a defined time to produce a representative output. Integration is an importan ...
s implemented using a magnetic drum with six storage tracks. The interconnections of the integrators were specified by writing an appropriate pattern of bits onto one of the tracks. In contrast to the prior ENIAC and UNIVAC I computers, which used electrical pulses to represent bits, the MADDIDA was the first computer to represent bits using voltage levels. It was also the first computer whose entire logic was specified in Boolean algebra. These features were an advancement from earlier digital computers that still had analog circuitry components. The original MADDIDA prototype is now part of the collection at the
Computer History Museum The Computer History Museum (CHM) is a museum of computer history, located in Mountain View, California. The museum presents stories and artifacts of Silicon Valley and the information age, and explores the computing revolution and its impact on ...
in Mountain View, California.


Distribution

Ultimately, the MADDIDA was never used in weaponry. Northrop ended up using a different analog computing system to guide the Snark missile, a system that was so dubious that many missiles were lost. A missile launched in 1956 went so far off course that it landed in north-eastern Brazil and was not found until 1983. Many of those connected with the program commented in jest "That the Caribbean was full of 'Snark infested waters'". After the MADDIDA design team left Northrop in 1950, another team, which included
Max Palevsky Max Palevsky (July 24, 1924 – May 5, 2010) was an American art collector, venture capitalist, philanthropist, and computer technology pioneer. He was known as a member of the Malibu Mafia – a group of wealthy American Jewish men who donate ...
, was hired to duplicate the machine for commercial distribution. By the end of 1952, six MADDIDAs had been delivered and installed, making it the bestselling commercial digital computer in the world at the time. One of the six was sold to the
Navy Electronics Laboratory The U.S. Navy Electronics Laboratory (''NEL'') was created in 1945, with consolidation of the naval radio station, radar operators training school, and radio security activity of the Navy Radio and Sound Lab (NRSL) and its wartime partner, the U ...
(see above photo).


Aftermath

While developing the MADDIDA, the design team came to realize that a
digital differential analyzer A digital differential analyzer (DDA), also sometimes called a digital integrating computer, is a digital implementation of a differential analyzer. The integrators in a DDA are implemented as accumulators, with the numeric result converted back ...
could be run on a general-purpose digital computer through the use of an appropriate problem-oriented language (POL), such as Dynamo. A year after the first MADDIDA was demonstrated, Steele and the MADDIDA design team left Northrop, along with
Irving S. Reed Irving Stoy Reed (November 12, 1923 – September 11, 2012) was an American mathematician and engineer. He is best known for co-inventing a class of algebraic error-correcting and error-detecting codes known as Reed–Solomon codes in collabora ...
, in order to develop general-purpose computers. On July 16, 1950, they formed the
Computer Research Corporation (CRC) The Computer Research Corporation (CRC) was an early developer of minicomputers. It was founded on July 16, 1950.Reilly 2003, p. 164. The founding owners of CRC were Floyd Steele, Donald Eckdahl, Hrant (Harold) Sarkinssian, Richard Sprague, and ...
, which in 1953 was sold to NCR.
Max Palevsky Max Palevsky (July 24, 1924 – May 5, 2010) was an American art collector, venture capitalist, philanthropist, and computer technology pioneer. He was known as a member of the Malibu Mafia – a group of wealthy American Jewish men who donate ...
, who later worked with the MADDIDA duplication team at Northrop, drew influence from the MADDIDA's design in his work in 1952–1956 building the Bendix G-15, an early personal computer, for the
Bendix Corporation Bendix Corporation is an American manufacturing and engineering company which, during various times in its existence, made automotive brake shoes and systems, vacuum tubes, aircraft brakes, aeronautical hydraulics and electric power systems, av ...
. In March 1957, Palevsky begin work at Packard Bell, at a new affiliate of the company he started called Packard Bell Computer Corp. Palevsky continued gaining commercial support for digital computing, allowing design advancement to continue. He retired as Director and Chairman of the Executive Committee of Xerox in May 1972. While Xerox would eventually drop personal computing, the Xerox prototypes would influence
Steve Jobs Steven Paul Jobs (February 24, 1955 – October 5, 2011) was an American entrepreneur, industrial designer, media proprietor, and investor. He was the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Apple; the chairman and majority shareholder of Pixar; a ...
and
Steve Wozniak Stephen Gary Wozniak (; born August 11, 1950), also known by his nickname "Woz", is an American electronics engineer, computer programmer, philanthropist, inventor, and technology entrepreneur. In 1976, with business partner Steve Jobs, he c ...
in their 1979 tour of the Xerox facilityhttp://zurb.com/article/801/steve-jobs-and-xerox-the-truth-about-inno Steve Jobs and Xerox: The Truth About Innovation.


See also

* List of vacuum-tube computers


Notes


References

* Ceruzzi, Paul E. (1989). "Beyond the Limits: Flight Enters the Computer Age" The MIT Press. * Reilly, Edwin D. (2003).
"Milestones in Computer and Science History"
', Greenwood Publishing Group. * Ulmann, Bernd. (2013). "Analog Computing" De Gruyter Oldenbourg. * Annals of the History of Computing. Volume 9, Number 3/4. 1988.
Computer History Museum, Artifact Catalog: MADDIDA (Magnetic Drum Digital Differential Analyzer)

Computer History Museum, MADDIDA Customer Demonstration
* Zaloga, Steven J. "Chapter 5." ''Target America: The Soviet Union and the Strategic Arms Race, 1945–1964''. New York: Presidio Press, 1993. .


External links

* {{Commons category-inline, Magnetic Drum Digital Differential Analyzer
MADDIDA (Magnetic Drum Digital Differential Analyzer) at the Computer History Museum
* Milestones in Computer Science and Information Technology
Full Text Free at Google Books
History of computing hardware Vacuum tube computers