BESK

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BESK (Binär Elektronisk SekvensKalkylator, Swedish for "Binary Electronic Sequence Calculator") was Sweden's first computer. It was developed by Matematikmaskinnämnden and during a short time it was the fastest computer in the world. The computer was completed in 1953. The technology behind BESK was later continued with FACIT EDB. A copy of BESK called SMIL was made for the University of Lund, and a copy of BESK made in Denmark was called DASK.

The team was led by Stig Comét. The hardware was developed by Erik Stemme. Gösta Neovius and Olle Karlqvist were responsible for architecture and instruction set. It was closely modeled on the IAS machine for which the design team had retrieved drawings during a trip to the United States.

Originally BESK had a British Williams tube memory with 40 cathode tubes. The memory was soon found to be insufficient and Carl-Ivar Bergman was given just a few weeks to build and install a ferrite core memory. To get finished before the deadline they hired housewives with knitting experience to make the memory. One of the new memory bits did not work at first, but it was easily cut out and replaced. The first calculations were done on April 1, 1954 and BESK handled weather data for SMHI, statistics for Televerket, wing profiles for Saab Lansen and road profiles for Vägverket. During the nights FRA used BESK for decryption of radio messages. BESK was also used for calculations for the Swedish nuclear weapons program, but most calculations were done by SMIL. In 1957 Hans Riesel used BESK to discover a Mersenne prime with 969 digits - the largest prime known at the time.

BESK was developed by Matematikmaskinnämnden at the same time as BARK.

SAAB rented computer time on the BESK to (probably, much was secret) make calculations of the strength of the Saab Lansen. In the fall of 1955 SAAB thought the capacity was insufficient and started working on SAABs räkneautomat SARA, "SAAB's calculating machine", which was going to be twice as fast as BESK. Some former BESK employees went to Facit and worked with the Facit EDB.

Trivia: "Besk" is Swedish for the taste "bitter". It is also the name of a traditional bitter made from distilled alcohol seasoned with the herb Artemisia absinthium L. local to the province of Skåne, in which Lund is located. Reportedly this was an intentional and unnoticed pun after officials denied usage of the name CONIAC (Conny [Palm] Integrator And Calculator, compare Cognac) for the BARK machine.

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