The showcase IBM effort at high-performance computing in the 1960's has traditionally been considered the IBM S/360 Model 91. That machine well-deserves the attention it has received. In fact, in the field of computer architecture, the decade of the sixties is known for the CDC 6600 and the IBM Model 91, and many modern processors trace features back to those machines.

However, there was another relatively unknown IBM effort that operated in parallel with the deployment of the Model 91. It was launched by IBM Chairman T. J. Watson, Jr., “to come up with something so much better than the [just announced] 6800 as to once more, in the eyes of the public, put IBM far away in the prestige league.”

The project was called Advanced Computing Systems (ACS). It was set up in California specifically to be located far from normal mainframe development on the East Coast as well as to be close to the Livermore National Laboratories and the advanced work on disk drives at IBM’s San Jose facility.

ACS built upon earlier IBM work on Stretch and Stretch-Harvest influenced the legendary John Cocke, and on IBM’s follow-on “Project Y” at the T. J. Watson Research Center. Most of the Project Y personnel moved to California in 1965 to launch ACS. Many other designers and engineers were recruited and one visitor from Livermore Labs commented that he “had not seen such a high concentration of talent since the Manhattan Project.”

The ACS architecture incorporated innovations that remain important today, including multiple out-of-order dynamic instruction scheduling, multiple condition codes, a decoupled branch architecture, and instruction pre-fetching. Advanced ECL circuits and optimizing compilers were also crucial parts of the plans for ACS. On reflection it appears to have been the first “superscalar” design, and yet its story remains virtually untold to this day.

Please join us to hear former project members describe the exciting atmosphere of the ACS team and the computer design innovations that ACS created.

This event will present two consecutive panel discussions:

Project Y and Early ACS, also ACS-1 architecture and SW

- Fran Allen, IBM Fellow, Moderator
- Lynn Conway, Emerita Professor of EE/CS, University of Michigan 
- Brian Randell, Emeritus Professor of CS and Senior Research Investigator, Newcastle University

Panel 2- Later ACS and dispersion of folks elsewhere after
     1969 cancellation / also ACS HW   

-Russ Robelen, Moderator
- Bill Mooney, Retired
- John Zasio, Consultant



Where    Computer History Museum
1401 N. Shoreline Blvd.
Mountain View, CA 94043
Directions

When   

Thursday, February 18, 2010
12 p.m. Program
Come meet the ACS vets and enjoy this event with CHM friends and family.

Sandwiches will be provided.


Registration   

Free. To register or for more information on the event, please visit the Museum's website


Upcoming Events – Calendar


Thursday, March 4, 2010 at 7 p.m.
CHM Soundbytes- Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age
Author Kurt W. Beyer in Conversation with Northern California Public Broadcasting's Linda O'Bryon

      Place:
Computer History Museum

Coming in June
PLATO@50, Fifty Years of Innovation

      Place:
Computer History Museum

 

 


About the Computer History Museum
The Computer History Museum (CHM) in Mountain View, Calif. is a nonprofit organization with a four-decade history. The Museum is dedicated to the preservation and celebration of computer history, and is home to the largest international collection of computing artifacts in the world, encompassing computer hardware, software, documentation, ephemera, photographs and moving images.

CHM brings computer history to life through an acclaimed speaker series, dynamic website, onsite tours, as well as physical and online exhibits. Current exhibits include “Charles Babbage’s Difference Engine No. 2,” “Mastering the Game: A History of Computer Chess,” and “Innovation in the Valley” – a look at Silicon Valley startups. Our 25,000sq. ft. major, new exhibition will open in late 2010.

For open hours and more information, visit www.computerhistory.org or call
(650) 810-1010.

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