- Title Pages
- Epigraph
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of Photographs
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 The National Physical Laboratory
- 2 The creation of the NPL Mathematics Division
- 3 The origins and development of the ACE project
- 4 The Pilot ACE at the National Physical Laboratory<sup>1</sup>
- 5 Turing and the computer
- 6 The ACE and the shaping of British computing
- 7 From Turing machine to ‘electronic brain’
- 8 Computer architecture and the ACE computers
- 9 The Pilot ACE instruction format
- 10 Programming the Pilot ACE
- 11 The Pilot ACE: from concept to reality
- 12 Applications of the Pilot ACE and the DEUCE
- 13 The ACE Test Assembly, the Pilot ACE, the Big ACE, and the Bendix G15
- 14 The DEUCE—a user's view
- 15 <i>The ACE Simulator and the Cybernetic Model</i>
- 16 The Pilot Model and the Big ACE on the web
- 17 How valves work
- 18 Recollections of early vacuum tube circuits
- 19 Circuit design of the Pilot ACE and the Big ACE
- 20 Proposed electronic calculator (1945)
- 21 Notes on memory (1945)
- 22 The Turing–Wilkinson lecture series (1946–7)
- 23 The state of the art in electronic digital computing in Britain and the United States (1947)
- Index
The Turing–Wilkinson lecture series (1946–7)
The Turing–Wilkinson lecture series (1946–7)
- Chapter:
- (p.459) 22 The Turing–Wilkinson lecture series (1946–7)
- Source:
- Alan Turing's Automatic Computing Engine
- Author(s):
Alan M. Turing
James H. Wilkinson
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
This chapter presents the nine lectures given by Turing and his assistant Jim Wilkinson from December 1946 to February 1947. The lectures add substantially to the understanding of the evolution of the design of the ACE. Turing and Wilkinson describe Versions V, VI, and VII of the design.
Keywords: Alan M. Turing, Jim Wilkinson, Version V, Version VI, Version VII, ACE
Oxford Scholarship Online requires a subscription or purchase to access the full text of books within the service. Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter.
Please, subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian.
To troubleshoot, please check our FAQs , and if you can't find the answer there, please contact us .
- Title Pages
- Epigraph
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of Photographs
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 The National Physical Laboratory
- 2 The creation of the NPL Mathematics Division
- 3 The origins and development of the ACE project
- 4 The Pilot ACE at the National Physical Laboratory<sup>1</sup>
- 5 Turing and the computer
- 6 The ACE and the shaping of British computing
- 7 From Turing machine to ‘electronic brain’
- 8 Computer architecture and the ACE computers
- 9 The Pilot ACE instruction format
- 10 Programming the Pilot ACE
- 11 The Pilot ACE: from concept to reality
- 12 Applications of the Pilot ACE and the DEUCE
- 13 The ACE Test Assembly, the Pilot ACE, the Big ACE, and the Bendix G15
- 14 The DEUCE—a user's view
- 15 <i>The ACE Simulator and the Cybernetic Model</i>
- 16 The Pilot Model and the Big ACE on the web
- 17 How valves work
- 18 Recollections of early vacuum tube circuits
- 19 Circuit design of the Pilot ACE and the Big ACE
- 20 Proposed electronic calculator (1945)
- 21 Notes on memory (1945)
- 22 The Turing–Wilkinson lecture series (1946–7)
- 23 The state of the art in electronic digital computing in Britain and the United States (1947)
- Index