FRIDAY SURPRISE: The Witch is
Back.
Friday, November 20, 2009 Filed in:
Friday
Surprise!, Technology, History
Back in '51, the Atomic Energy Research Establishment in
Oxfordshire welcomed a new member to their staff: a computer. Today
we don't even bat an eyelid when a new PC shows up in the office,
but back then computers were a Big Deal. (After all, how many new
staff members get their own office - the largest one in the
building?)
The
Harwell Computer, later to be known as
"WITCH" (Wolverhampton Instrument for Teaching Computing from
Harwell), now occupies a unique position in computing history. It
holds the distinction of being the world's oldest surviving
computer with electronically-stored data and
programs. All the original parts are
present and it is capable, in theory, of being operated.

Though it hasn't been switched on for over 35 years, it is
now being restored to operational status
at the Museum of
Computing at Bletchley Park. They expect the restoration to be
completed next summer, at which point the WITCH will be able to
claim another title: oldest operational computer, beating out
the Ferranti Pegasus whipper-snapper at London's
Science Museum.
-=[
Grant ]=-
Tags: old.technology, computers