The IBM 608 was the first IBM product to use transistor circuits without any vacuum tubes and is believed to be the world's first all-transistorized calculator to be manufactured for the commercial market.[1][2] The 608 contained more than 3,000 germanium transistors.[3] Announced in April 1955,[4] it was released in December 1957. It was similar in nature of operation to the vacuum tube IBM 604, which had been introduced a decade earlier.[5] Although the 608 outpaced its immediate predecessor, the IBM 607 by a factor of 2.5,[4] it was soon obsoleted by newer IBM products and only a few dozen were ever delivered.[6][7] The 608 was withdrawn from marketing in April 1959.[4]
The use of transistors was a significant departure from the previous IBM calculators of this line; the 608 also used magnetic core memory, but was still programmed using a control panel.[8] The main memory of the 608 had could store 40 nine-digit numbers, and it had an 18-digit accumulator.[8] In raw speed terms, it could perform 4,500 additions per second, it could multiply two nine-digit numbers, yielding an 18-digit result in 11 milliseconds, and it could divide an 18-digit number by a nine-digit number to produce the nine-digit quotient in 13 milliseconds.[4] The 608 could handle 80 program steps.[8]
In order to spur the adoption of transistor technology, shortly before the first IBM 608 shipped, Tom Watson directed that a date be set after which no new vacuum tube based products would be released.[9] This decision constrained IBM product managers, which otherwise had the latitude to select components for their products, to make the move to transistors. As a result, the successor to the IBM 650 used transistors, and it became the IBM 7070—the company's first transistorized stored-program computer.[10]
The chief designer of the circuits used in the IBM 608 was Robert A. Henle, who later oversaw the development of emitter-coupled logic (ECL) class of circuits.[11] The development of the 608 was preceded by the prototyping of an experimental all-transistor version of the 604. Although this was built and demonstrated in October 1954, it was not commercialized.[12]