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    s23
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    Revision as of 23:33, 3 November 2005 by imported>mutante
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    The IBM 704 Computer (1954) was the first mass-produced computer with core memory and floating-point arithmetic, whose designers included John Backus, formerly of IBM Watson Laboratory at Columbia University (who also was the principal designer of FORTRAN, the first widespread high-level language for computer programming), as well as Gene Amdahl (who would go on to become chief architect for the IBM 360 and later start his own company to rival IBM). The 704's 6-bit BCD character set and 36-bit word account for FORTRAN's 6-character limit on identifiers.

    Related: Fortran

    IBM 704 history on columbia.edu

    IBM 704 Manual

    IBM 704 Fortran Manual

    IBM 704 on ibm.com

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