IBM 1401 COMPUTER & DATA PROCESSING FOR THE ROPER CORPORATION 72392
Dating to the
1960s, this
IBM produced film tells the story of the
George D.
Roper Corporation, a manufacturer of gas and electric stoves, and how its business was transformed by high tech data management. The film features IBM's
Clyde Janson, who helped install IBM's 402 and 602 computers at Roper in
1958. Also shown are
O56 Verifiers and
O52 Keypunch, 557 interpreter, 519 reproducer, O83 and O84 sorter, and
O88 Collator, and the processing system.
The computer being used is the 1401, including a
CPU, typewriter, printer, keypunch, and two 7330
Magnetic Tape Drives and a 1405 Ramack. 450 programs generate
1000 reports monthly covering order billing, sales analysis, payroll, etc.
The
IBM 1401 was a variable wordlength decimal computer that was announced by IBM on
October 5,
1959. The first member of the highly successful
IBM 1400 series, it was aimed at replacing electromechanical unit record equipment for processing data stored on punched cards. Over 12,
000 units were produced and many were leased or resold in less developed countries after they were replaced with newer technology. The 1401 was withdrawn on
February 8,
1971.
Commonly used by small businesses as their primary data processing machines, the 1401 was also frequently used as an off-line peripheral controller for mainframe computers. In such installations, with an
IBM 7090 for example, the mainframe computers used only magnetic tape for input-output. It was the 1401 that transferred input data from slow peripherals (such as the
IBM 1402 Card Read-Punch) to tape, and transferred output data from tape to the card punch, the
IBM 1403 Printer, or other peripherals. This allowed the mainframe's throughput to not be limited by the speed of a card reader or printer.
Elements within IBM, notably
John Haanstra, an executive in charge of 1401 deployment, supported its continuation in larger models for evolving needs (e.g., the
IBM 1410) but the 1964 decision at the top to focus resources on the
System/360 ended these efforts rather suddenly. Then, faced with the competitive threat of the
Honeywell 200 and the
360's incompatibility with the 1401 design, IBM pioneered the use of microcode emulation, in the form of
ROM, so that some System/360 models could run 1401 programs.
During the
1970s, IBM installed many 1401s in
India and Pakistan where they were in use well into the
1980s. Some of today's
Indian and
Pakistani software entrepreneurs started on these 1401s. The first computer in
Pakistan, for example, was a 1401 installed at
Pakistan International Airlines.
Two 1401 systems have been restored to operating order at the
Computer History Museum in
Mountain View, California, complete with a raised floor typical of the mainframe era (and modern data centers), used to hide cabling and distribute cooled air.
Roper Industries' historical roots reach back to its founder, George D. Roper, and the company he started in
1919, the Geo. D. Roper Corporation. Founded in
Rockford, Illinois, as a manufacturer of gas stoves and gear pumps, Geo. D. Roper Corp. became best known for its production stoves, developing into a flourishing concern that eventually manufactured electric and gas kitchen ranges, power gardening tools, and a host of other home-related goods. In
1957,
Florence Stove sold its manufacturing facility in
Florence, Massachusetts, and transferred production to
Illinois, then purchased the inventories of finished products, receivables, and all capital stock of Geo. D. Roper Corp. The entire new operation took the name Geo. D. Roper Corp. in 1958.
Sears not only was Geo. D. Roper Corp.'s largest customer but also owned nearly half of the Illinois-based appliance manufacturer. This relationship between Sears and Geo D. Roper Corp. was strengthened when Geo D. Roper Corp. merged with a wholly owned Sears subsidiary,
Newark Ohio Co., in 1964.
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