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Plugboard, a component of certain encryption machines, unit record equipment and some early computers; Telephone switchboard, another name for a manual exchange; Power strip a device that plugs into a power socket to increase the number of power sockets available for other devices
Reverse side of the same 402 plugboard, showing the pins that make contact with the machine's internal wiring. The holes were called hubs. A plugboard or control panel (the term used depends on the application area) is an array of jacks or sockets (often called hubs) into which patch cords can be inserted to complete an electrical circuit.
The IBM 608 Transistor Calculator, a plugboard-programmable unit, was the first IBM product to use transistor circuits without any vacuum tubes and is believed to be the world's first all-transistorized calculator to be manufactured for the commercial market. [1] [2]: 34 Announced in April 1955, [3] [4] it was released in December 1957. The 608 ...
The IBM 608 plugboard programmable calculator was IBM's first all-transistor product, released in 1957; this was a console type system, with input and output on punched cards, and replaced the earlier, larger, vacuum-tube IBM 603. Early calculator light-emitting diode (LED) display from the 1970s
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The IBM 513, 514 and 519 all operated at 100 cards per minute, [8] and their operations were directed by a removable control panel that was known as a plugboard. [9] As with other IBM punched card devices that operated as automatic punches, cards are fed "face down, 12-edge first.".
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