UNIVAC
This computer was used from 1967 through 1990 at the U.S. Air Force’s Satellite Control Facility, in Sunnyvale, California.
Wikimedia Commons
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation (public domain)
univac
Bild: Peter.Hamer
Remington-Rand Presents the Univac
SINS computer room with Univac Computer On the USS Midway (CV-41)
SINS computer room with Univac Computer On the USS Midway (CV-41) USS Midway Museum San Diego, California
Bild: Jim Frazier
UNIVAC 1232 Computer
UNIVAC 1232 Computer in the James S. McDonnell Space Hangar at the National Air & Space Museum's Udvar-Hazy Center, Chantilly, VA
Bild: Diorama Sky
Univac: Universal Automatic Calculator
Bild: Marcin Wichary
Computer, UNIVAC 1232
This computer was used from 1967 through 1990 at the U.S. Air Force's Satellite Control Facility, in Sunnyvale, California. From this facility, over a dozen Sperry 1230-series computers operated in "real time" around the clock, as part of a system that controlled and operated Air Force, NASA, other government, and commercial satellites. It also supported Space Shuttle missions. The 1232 computer was manufactured by the St. Paul, MN division of Sperry Univac, and was a military version of the UNIVAC 490 general purpose commercial computer. The computer used discrete transistors, was optimized for real-time use, had a 30-bit word length, and initially was supplied with 32,000 words of memory (approximately 123 K Bytes).
Bild: cliff1066