Pilot Model ACE

Electronics engineer Edward Newman inspects the mercury delay lines, which form the memory of Pilot Model ACE, the prototype of the Automatic Computing Engine (ACE), during a press day at the National Physical Laboratory at Bushy Park in Teddington, London, 29th November 1950. ACE is one of the first computers built in Britain and is a stored-program machine, which uses 800 vacuum tubes. The machine was designed by Alan Turing before he left the National Physical Laboratory in 1947. (Photo by Jimmy Sime/Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Electronics engineer Edward Newman inspects the mercury delay lines, which form the memory of Pilot Model ACE, the prototype of the Automatic Computing Engine (ACE), during a press day at the National Physical Laboratory at Bushy Park in Teddington, London, 29th November 1950. ACE is one of the first computers built in Britain and is a stored-program machine, which uses 800 vacuum tubes. The machine was designed by Alan Turing before he left the National Physical Laboratory in 1947. (Photo by Jimmy Sime/Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Pilot Model ACE
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Credit:
Jimmy Sime / Stringer
Editorial #:
717772319
Collection:
Hulton Archive
Date created:
November 29, 1950
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Release info:
Not released. More information
Source:
Hulton Archive
Object name:
J000642102
Max file size:
4569 x 3817 px (15.23 x 12.72 in) - 300 dpi - 7 MB