Difference between revisions of "Elliott Brothers"

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* [https://www.billp.org/ccs/A104/ 803 ALGOL] - manual for Elliott 803 [[ALGOL]]
 
* [https://www.billp.org/ccs/A104/ 803 ALGOL] - manual for Elliott 803 [[ALGOL]]
 
* [https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/358549.358561 The Emperor's Old Clothes]
 
* [https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/358549.358561 The Emperor's Old Clothes]
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* [https://www.ancientgeek.org.uk/ICL/An_ICL_Anthology.pdf An ICL Anthology] - contains Elliott Brothers-related content on pp. 70-72 (of the PDF)
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* [https://www.ancientgeek.org.uk/ICL/Another_ICL_Anthology.pdf Another ICL Anthology] - contains Elliott Brothers-related content on pp. 50-51
  
[[Category: Manufacturers]]
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[[Category: British Manufacturers]]

Revision as of 02:50, 12 February 2025

Elliott Brothers (also known as Elliott-Automation) was a British computer company.

In 1958, in an attempt to form a strong national computer manufacturer, the commercial data processing element of Elliott Brothers was merged with International Computers and Tabulators, to form International Computers Limited. The remaining real-time systems part of Elliott-Automation was merged with similar elements of GEC, Marconi, and English Electric in 1969, to form Marconi Elliott Computer Systems Limited, re-named GEC Computers in 1972.

It is perhaps best-known to history for the ALGOL compiler for the Elliott 803, largely written by Tony Hoare (who had been hired by Elliotts as a programmer in August 1960). His experiences with ALGOL were an inspiration for his famous 1980 Turing Award lecture, The Emperor's Old Clothes - see link below).

Further reading

External links