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- Konrad Zuse - Wikipedia
Zuse founded one of the earliest computer companies: the Zuse-Ingenieurbüro Hopferau Capital was raised in 1946 through ETH Zurich and an IBM option on Zuse's patents
- Zuse computer | History Impact of Early Computing | Britannica
Zuse began construction of the Z4 in 1943 with funding from the German Air Ministry Like his Z3, the Z4 used electromechanical relays, in part because of the difficulty in acquiring the roughly 2,000 necessary vacuum tubes in wartime Germany
- Konrad Zuse – Complete Biography, History and Inventions
Konrad Zuse was a German civil engineer, computer scientist, inventor, and businessman He was born in 1910 in Berlin, Germany Zuse received a PhD in civil engineering from the Technical University of Berlin in 1934 Zuse gained prominence for the S2 computing machine, invented in 1936
- Konrad Zuse - CHM
Zuse worked throughout WWII on other designs, culminating in his Z3 computer, the world's first fully operational stored-program electromechanical computer He was able to sell one to the German aircraft bureau, which needed it to solve aerodynamic problems
- Computer Pioneers - Konrad Zuse
From 1936 to 1938 Konrad Zuse developed and built the first binary digital computer in the world (Z1) A copy of this computer is on display in the Museum for Transport and Technology (Museum für Verkehr und Technik) in Berlin
- Konrad Zuse Internet Archive
Production of the Zuse series of computers was eventually stopped In retrospect it can be said that Konrad Zuse's greatest achievement was the development of a family of fully digital, floating-point, programmable machines, which were built in almost total intellectual isolation from 1936 to 1945
- DPMA | Konrad Zuse
In 1949 Konrad Zuse founded Zuse KG in Neukirchen near Hünfeld (Hesse) and established the computer industry in Germany He had not remained idle even before that: Between 1945 and 1947, Konrad Zuse developed the world's first programming language, the "Plankalkül "
- Z3 (computer) - Wikipedia
Zuse designed the Z1 in 1935 to 1936 and built it from 1936 to 1938 The Z1 was wholly mechanical and only worked for a few minutes at a time at most Helmut Schreyer advised Zuse to use a different technology
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