IBM 1400 series

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The IBM 1400 series were second generation mid-range business transistor computers that IBM sold in the early 1960s. They could be operated as an independent system, in conjunction with IBM punched card equipment, or as auxiliary equipment to other computer systems.

1400-series machines stored information in magnetic cores as variable length character strings terminated by a special flag. Arithmetic was performed character-by-character. Input and output was on punched card, magnetic tape and high speed line printers. Disk storage was also available.

Contents

History

The 1401 was the first member of the IBM 1400 series. The IBM 1410 was a similar design, but with a larger address space. The IBM 1460 was logically but not physically identical to a fully optioned 1401 with 16,000 characters of memory. The 1240 was a banking system, equivalent to the 1440 system with MICR support.

Members of the 1400 series included:

Compatible systems

IBM provided several models compatible (or nearly so) with the 1401.

Honeywell's Honeywell 200 provided approximate 1401 compatibility through a combination of architectural similarity and software support.

Programming Languages

Programming languages for the 1400 series included Symbolic Programming System (SPS, an assembly language), Autocoder (assembly language), COBOL, FORTRAN, Report Program Generator (RPG) and FARGO.


Retirement

The 1400 series was replaced by System/360 and low end machines like IBM System 3 and subsequently the System/32, System/34, System/36, System/38 and AS/400.

The 1400s were officially withdrawn in the early 1970s, however some 1400-series peripherals were still sold with third generation systems.

Two IBM 1401 computers are being restored to full operational status by the Computer History Museum.

References

External links

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