- Source: James E. Thornton
James E. Thornton (September 25, 1925, in Saint Paul, Minnesota – January 11, 2005) was an American computer engineer.
Thornton studied electrical engineering at the University of Minnesota earning a bachelor's degree in 1950. Immediately afterwards he went to Engineering Research Associates (ERA), which was acquired by Remington Rand in 1952. In 1958 he left with other ERA engineers to form the new Control Data Corporation (CDC). He remained there until 1973 and was involved in the development of the CDC 1604, CDC 6600, 6400, 6500, and the STAR-100. With Seymour Cray, he was the main developer of the pioneering supercomputer CDC 6000, which came onto the market in 1964.
In 1974 he co-founded Network Systems Corporation, which manufactured computer networks connecting mainframes and minicomputers, including HYPERchannel.
In 1994 he received the Eckert-Mauchly Award "for his pioneering work on high performance processors; for inventing the scoreboard for instruction issue; and for fundamental contributions to vector supercomputing." In 1997 he received the Harry H. Goode Memorial Award from the IEEE Computer Society "for pioneering contributions and leadership in high performance computing and networking."
References
External links
Oral history interview with James E. Thornton at the Charles Babbage Institute
Design of a Computer the Control Data 6600
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Asa Butterfield
- Indonesia
- James Joyce
- Daftar antariksawan
- Hyde Park, Sydney
- To Sir, with Love
- Angelina Jolie
- Keuskupan Kuno Orange
- Perdagangan budak Atlantik
- Thomas Posey
- James Thornton
- James E. Thornton
- James Thornton (actor)
- Billy Bob Thornton
- CDC 6000 series
- UNIVAC 1103
- List of awards and nominations received by Billy Bob Thornton
- James Thornton (environmentalist)
- David Thornton (actor)
- Out-of-order execution