Alan Turing's Automatic Computing Engine
The Master Codebreaker's Struggle to build the Modern Computer
Copeland, B. Jack Professor of Philosophy at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Print publication date: 2005 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2008
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-856593-2







doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198565932.003.0015

Robin A. Vowels
Abstract: This chapter describes the origins and development of the English Electric DEUCE (Digital Electronic Universal Computing Engine), the production machine derived from the ACE Pilot Model. The DEUCE was an outstanding commercial success due to its high speed, huge programme and subroutine library, fast magnetic drum, enhanced peripheral equipment, and extraordinary reliability. The first DEUCE was installed in early 1955. Most DEUCEs saw a decade of service, and approximately twenty were still operating in 1965, some continuing to the end of the decade.

Keywords: Digital Electronic Universal Computing Machine, computer, Pilot ACE,

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Part I The National Physical Laboratory and the ACE Project
Part II Turing and the History of Computing
Part III The ACE Computers
Part IV Electronics
Part V Technical Reports and Lectures on the ACE 1945–47