Univac Defense Systems: From Codebreakers to Standard Military Computers From WWII to 1970
Twin Cities IEEE Life Member Affinity Group
November Virtual Meeting
November 4, 2024 7 pm Central Time
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This webinar presents the history of Military computers from the very first electromechanical codebreaking machines of WWII through the first Tube machines of the 1940s and early 1950s to the transistor & early integrated circuit machines of the late 1950s & 1960s. We learn of the roots of Univac Defense Systems (now part of Lockheed Martin) as the leading military computer company and how those roots were driven by the Navy’s OP-20-G communications intelligence group responsible for breaking Japanese, German, and Italian codes in WWII before becoming the NSA during the cold war. We watch the development of the Naval Tactical Data System, its computers, and how went on to serve Navy, Marines, Air Force, NASA, and FAA.
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- Date: 04 Nov 2024
- Time: 07:00 PM to 08:30 PM
- All times are (UTC-06:00) Central Time (US & Canada)
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- Starts 24 October 2024 12:00 AM
- Ends 04 November 2024 12:00 AM
- All times are (UTC-06:00) Central Time (US & Canada)
- No Admission Charge
Speakers
David Bondurant of Pikes Peak Section Life Member Affinity Group
Univac Defense Systems: From Codebreakers to Standard Military Computers From WWII to 1970
Biography:
David Bondurant has been involved with the computer and semiconductor industry for 53 years. He was a computer architect at Control Data, Sperry-Univac, and Honeywell. He was involved with the government-sponsored advanced semiconductor program called VHSIC (Very High Speed Integrated Circuits) at Univac & Honeywell where he developed microprocessor and ASIC semiconductor products in bipolar CML, CMOS, and radiation hard CMOS. He was involved with emerging non-volatile RAM marketing at industry leading companies, Ramtron (FRAM), Simtek (non-volatile SRAM), and Freescale Semiconductor/Everspin Technologies (MRAM).