A step toward automated computation was the introduction of
punched cards, which were first successfully used in connection with computing
in 1890 by Herman Hollerith working for the U.S. Census Bureau. He developed
a device which could automatically read census information which had been
punched onto card. Surprisingly, he did not get the idea from the work of
Babbage, but rather from watching a train conductor punch tickets. As a
result of his invention, reading errors were consequently greatly reduced,
work flow was increased, and, more important, stacks of punched cards could be
used as an accessible memory store of almost unlimited capacity; furthermore,
different problems could be stored on different batches of cards and worked on
as needed. Hollerith's tabulator became so successful that he started his own
firm to market the device; this company eventually became International
Business Machines (IBM).
Computers: From the Past to the Present
Herman Hollerith:
Last modified July 30, 2006
©1994-2006 by Michelle A. Hoyle