The IBM 1440 computer was announced by IBM October 11, 1962.[1] This member of the IBM 1400 series was described many years later as "essentially a lower-cost version of the 1401",[2] and programs for the 1440 could easily be adapted to run on the IBM 1401.
Despite what IBM described as "special features ... to meet immediate data processing requirements and ... to absorb increased demands," the 1440 did not quite attain the same commercial success as the 1401,[2] and it was withdrawn on February 8, 1971.
Author Emerson Pugh wrote that the 1440 "did poorly in the marketplace because it was initially offered without the ability to attach magnetic tape units as well." (referring to offering both tape and disk).[3]
System configuration
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External image
IBM 1440 system
The IBM 1441 processing unit (CPU) contained arithmetic and logic circuits and up to 16,000 alphanumeric storage positions.[4]
The console was either a Model 1 or, when an electric typewriter was added, a Model 2, of the IBM 1447 operator's console.[1]
In the 1960s, Polish ZOWAR (ZETO Warszawa) was officially the first customer for IBM in Poland after WWII, despite the Iron Curtain.[13]
In 2012, the TechWorks! Prototype Workshop of the Center for Technology & Innovation (CT&I) in Binghamton, New York successfully resurrected a 1440 system including a CPU and console, a 1311 disk drive, and a 1442 card reader/punch.[14]
An example of a more fully configured 1440[15] was:
five disk drives
two magnetic tape drives
two card reader-punches
one high-speed printer
an optical reader (to transfer specially coded medical data forms to magnetic tape)
References
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^ ab"1440 Data Processing System". IBM.com. 23 January 2003. Archived from the original on January 14, 2005.
^ abRyan Rhodes (September 2012). "A 1440 Data Processing System Finds New Life After 50 Years". IBM Systems Journal.
^ abEmerson W. Pugh (2009). Building IBM: Shaping an Industry and Its Technology. ISBN 978-0262307680.
^A convenience sampling of mid-1970s 1440 For-Sale ads showed 8K and 12K as quite common
^"Technical Newsletter (No. N24-0219, File No. 1440-01)" (PDF). June 15, 1964. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 16, 2011. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
^"Executive Guide to the IBM 1440 Data Processing System" (PDF). 1962.
^IBM 1442 Card Read-Punch Models 1 and 2 IBM 1442 Card Reader Models 3 and 4(PDF). IBM. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-22. Retrieved 2017-12-21.
^"A-Z upper case, 10 digits 0–9, and 16 special characters: "Executive Guide to the IBM 1440 Data Processing System" (PDF). 1962.