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Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "1960s in technology" This category contains only the following page.
1960 US A working MOSFET is built by a team at Bell Labs. E. E. LaBate and E. I. Povilonis made the device; M. O. Thurston, L. A. D’Asaro, and J. R. Ligenza developed the diffusion processes, and H. K. Gummel and R. Lindner characterized the device. [12] [13] 1960: US EUR ALGOL, first structured, procedural, programming language to be ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "1960s in computing" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 ...
The following articles cover the timeline of United States inventions: Timeline of United States inventions (before 1890), before the turn of the century; Timeline of United States inventions (1890–1945), before World War II; Timeline of United States inventions (1946–1991), during the Cold War
By 1960, magnetic core was the dominant memory technology, although there were still some new machines using drums and delay lines during the 1960s. Magnetic thin film and rod memory were used on some second-generation machines, but advances in core technology meant they remained niche players until semiconductor memory displaced both core and ...
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February 13 Max Perutz publishes the structure of hemoglobin. [4]John Kendrew publishes the structure of myoglobin. [5]March 5 – British marine biologist Sir Alister Hardy announces his aquatic ape hypothesis, theorising that swimming and diving for food exerted a strong evolutionary effect partly responsible for the divergence in the common descent of humans and other great apes.
June 18 – Lisa Randall, American theoretical physicist. June 29 – George D. Zamka, American astronaut. September 20 – Jim Al-Khalili, Iraqi-born British theoretical physicist and science communicator. October 6 – David Baker, American biochemist and computational biologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.