Main content

The Baby - Wonderland

Sixty years ago, Manchester University's Baby became the world's first stored-program electronic digital computer. Quentin Cooper celebrates its anniversary and explores its legacy.

The Baby
Sixty years ago the chair of IBM thought there would one day be a world market for about 5 computers. In this week鈥檚 Material World, Quentin Cooper celebrates the 60th anniversary of the first ever task performed by a computer. On the 21st June 1948 Manchester University鈥檚 Small-Scale Experimental Machine, or Baby, the world鈥檚 first stored programme electronic digital computer ran its first ever program. With a mere 128 bytes of memory and only seven possible instructions, Baby鈥檚 capabilities may sound primitive by today鈥檚 standards, but the principles behind it survive to this day in all computers. Sixty years on Quentin explores the incredible legacy of Baby and its progeny in the decades since with Steve Furber from Manchester University and Simon Moore from Cambridge University.

Wonderland
Also in the programme why a collaboration between artist Helen Storey and chemist Tony Ryan from Sheffield University are making bottles that could recycle themselves and why their work could revolutionize packaging.

Available now

26 minutes

Broadcast

  • Thu 19 Jun 2008 16:30

Inside Science

Inside Science

Adam Rutherford explores the research that is transforming our world.