UNIVAC was the first modern computer created by J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly to replace slower punch-card machines using faster magnetic tape. It gained social acceptance by accurately predicting the 1952 US presidential election result, becoming the world's first commercially available computer. Its commercial availability led computers to be seen as more accessible multi-purpose tools rather than specialized machines and started increasing dependency on computers.
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UNIVAC: The First Modern Computer
UNIVAC was the first modern computer created by J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly to replace slower punch-card machines using faster magnetic tape. It gained social acceptance by accurately predicting the 1952 US presidential election result, becoming the world's first commercially available computer. Its commercial availability led computers to be seen as more accessible multi-purpose tools rather than specialized machines and started increasing dependency on computers.
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UNIVAC: The First Modern
Computer
Creators: J. Presper Eckert and
John Mauchly UNIVAC was created to replace older punch-card machines. It used magnetic tape which was significantly faster than punch cards, and easier to use. UNIVAC was socially accepted after it accurately predicted the outcome of the Eisenhower-Stevenson Presidential race. After that, it became the worlds first commercially available; before that, computers were specially made for specific uses. One positive impact was that computers were now seen as more accessible, as they were now able to be produced commercially. People now saw them as multiple function tools, instead of specialized ones. A negative impact was that people were going down the path where people would be more and more dependant on computers, now that they could be commercially produced. This could be seen as both positive and negative, but it defiantly helped lead to today’s dependency on machines.