Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer

Also known as: EDVAC

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controversy over patent

    development of digital computers

    history of general-purpose computers

    • A laptop computer
      In computer: Bigger brains

      …School for ENIAC’s successor, the Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer, or EDVAC. (Planning for EDVAC also set the stage for an ensuing patent fight; see BTW: Computer patent wars.) ENIAC was hampered, as all previous electronic computers had been, by the need to use one vacuum tube to store each…

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    stored-program concept

    use in computer programming

      work of Wilkes

      • Maurice Wilkes
        In Maurice Wilkes

        …Discrete Variable Automatic Computer (EDVAC), in which both the data and the programs that would manipulate the data would be stored within EDVAC’s memory. This stored-program computer was an advance upon previous machines such as the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC), in which the program instructions were determined…

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      distributed computing, the coordinated use of many computers disbursed over a wide area to do complex tasks.

      Distributed computing is a method that researchers use to solve highly complicated problems without having to use an expensive supercomputer. Much like multiprocessing, which uses two or more processors in one computer to carry out a task, distributed computing uses a large number of computers to split up the computational load. With distributed computing, client programs are first installed onto each computer. The client programs then download files containing portions of the problem to be processed and analyzed. As each file is analyzed, the clients send the calculations to a centralized server that compiles the results. In many cases, the programs run when the computers would otherwise be idle, such as overnight.

      Distributed computing has been used for such traditional supercomputer applications as protein sequencing and breaking cryptographic codes. Because the cost of distributed computing is much lower than that of a supercomputer, often with volunteers downloading and running the client programs, it has also been used for projects that have trouble getting large amounts of funding, such as the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI). SETI@home is one of the first and best-known distributed computing projects.

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      This article was most recently revised and updated by Robert Curley.