CER-10
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CER (Serbian: Цифарски Електронски Рачунар - Digital Electronic Computer) model 10 was a vacuum tube and transistor based computer developed by Mihajlo Pupin Institute (Serbia) in 1960. This was the first computer ever (1) developed in SFRY.
CER-10 was designed by prof. dr Tihomir Aleksić (1) and associates (Rajko Tomović, Ahmed Mandžić, Nedeljko Parezanović, Petar Vrbavac, Vukašin Masnikosa, Milojko Marić and Dušan Hristović) and developed over the period of three years. The team is said to have included 10 engineers, 10 technicians and many others (3). After initial prototype testing it was fully deployed in 1963.
First CER-10 was situated in UDBA building which later belonged to Tanjug.(2). March 2006 the Institute gave the case and parts of CER-10 to the Museum of Science and Technology in Belgrade, where it will eventually be displayed.
[edit] Specifications
- 1700 vacuum tubes (2)
- 1300 Germanium transistors (2)
- Magnetic core primary memory: 4096 of 30-bit words (2)
- Secondary memory: punched tape (2)
- Capable of performing 1600 additions per second (3)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- CER-10 at manufacturer's site (with picture)
[edit] References
- E-Potencijali Srbije, by Nikola Marković, president of Computer Science Society of Serbia
- Skupa kupovina za male pare, by Dejan Ristanović, contains a description of CER-10 in introduction, in Serbian language
- Mali čas istorije i jezik G2K, by Milenko Vasić, from the archive of micro.co.yu
Computer systems from Serbia |
|
1980‑2000: |
TIM-100 | TIM-001 | TIM-600 | TIM-011 | TIM-40M | ATLAS-TIM AT 32 | Galaksija | Galaksija Plus | Pecom 32 | Pecom 64 | Lira XT | Lola 8 | PA512 | LPA512 |
1960‑1979: |
CER Computers (CER-10, CER-2, CER-20, CER-200, CER-202, CER-22, CER-12, CER-203) | HRS-100 |
Theoretical: | |
See also: |
Full lists from Serbia | former Yugoslavia | World and history of computing in: Serbia | former Yugoslavia | (former) communist countries | World |