
The world’s oldest, original, still-working digital computer
has been unveiled at the National Museum of Computing in Bletchley Park, the
home of the United Kingdom’s Second World War encryption and codebreaking
efforts, where, among other luminaries, Alan Turing and co famously broke the
German Enigma cipher.
The computer, originally called Harwell but now called the
Wolverhampton Instrument for Teaching Computing from Harwell (WITCH), was
originally powered up in 1951 (pictured above). Between 1952 and 1957 the
computer was used for early atomic research, and then it was given to
Wolverhampton University, where it remained in operation until 1973. Between
1973 and 1997 it was on display at a museum in Birmingham, and then it
disappeared into storage, only to be discovered by chance in 2009.
-Extreme Tech
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