Several developers of ENIAC, recognizing its flaws, came up with a
far more flexible and elegant design, which came to be known as the
"stored-program architecture" or von Neumann architecture. This design was
first formally described by John von Neumann in the paper First Draft of a Report on
the EDVAC, distributed in 1945. A number of projects to develop
computers based on the stored-program architecture commenced around
this time, the first of which was completed in 1948 at the University of Manchester
in England, the Manchester
Small-Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM or "Baby"). The Electronic Delay
Storage Automatic Calculator (EDSAC), completed a year after the
SSEM at Cambridge University, was the first
practical, non-experimental implementation of the stored-program design
and was put to use immediately for research work at the university.
Shortly thereafter, the machine originally described by von Neumann's
paper—EDVAC—was
completed but did not see full-time use for an additional two years.
Nearly all modern computers implement some form of the stored-program
architecture, making it the single trait by which the word "computer"
is now defined. While the technologies used in computers have changed
dramatically since the first electronic, general-purpose computers of
the 1940s, most still use the von Neumann architecture.
Beginning in the 1950s, Soviet scientists Sergei Sobolev and Nikolay Brusentsov conducted research on ternary computers, devices that operated on a base three
numbering system of −1, 0, and 1 rather than the conventional binary numbering system upon which most
computers are based. They designed the Setun, a
functional ternary computer, at Moscow State University. The device
was put into limited production in the Soviet Union, but supplanted by
the more common binary architecture.
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