RMD96753–Hollerith tabulator which used a punched card memory system. First used in the US census of 1890. Engraving, Paris, 1894
RF2BDXYCB–Punch Card
RMMNPNCN–HERMAN HOLLERITH (1860-1929) American inventor who developed a punch card tabulator and eventually to the foundation of IBM
RM2K01J4C–Hollerith tabulator. The sorting box. This machine, first used in the US Census of 1890, had a punched card memory system. From La Nature, Paris, 1894.
RMDAHYM3–PUNCH CARDS 1940 photo showing operator using a Hollerith pantograph to register data for a census form
RMHRHCKD–Punch Card
RM2BCNYN2–Early Calculators & Computers - A punch card for a Hollerith electrical tabulating machine. It allowed for recording (for example) the date, contract / order number, customer details, quantity or weight,gross,net,value and packing charges. Invented in the 1880's by the American statistician Herman Hollerith. It was an electrical device that rapidly sorted and analysed information on punched record cards. Other information such as a person's , age or gender could also be included, making the system suitable for recording medical records and census records.
RMET31D5–Kiel, Germany, Hollerith punch card in the computer museum in the Fachhochschule Kiel
RF2PK873J–'Hollerith; punch card machine at The intelligence factory at Bletchley Park
RM2K5FW45–Machine for sorting punch cards in the Hollerith section. Holes were punched in each card.
RMBJ380R–Hollerith data machine in an office at the Edgar Allen Steel Co, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, 1963. Artist: Michael Walters
RMCWBRC1–Herman Hollerith (1860-1929), American inventor of a punch card tabulating machine for automating the 1890 U.S. Census. Similar
RM2R91FY5–Cleveland, Ohio: c. 1952 A computer technician holding a wired circuit board installed in an IBM punch card machine.
RMTXGN48–Hollerith tabulator which used a punched card memory system. First used in the US census of 1890 Engraving, Paris, 1894
RM2R2G51R–IBM: The historic Hollerith punch was used to record data on punched cards. Punch cards were an important tool for data entry and data processing
RM2CDD805–. Appendix to the Journals of the Senate and Assembly of the ... session of the Legislature of the State of California . cards to facili-tate the tabulation of the data. A sample of the Hollerith card usedis shown en page -11. All cards for part-time employees, extra help, employees elected orappointed for a fixed term, and employees with less than six months ofservice were excluded before any tabulations weie made. SALARY SCALES The rates of salary were tabulated to establish a salarj- scale, showingthe relative salaries at the various attained ages. The data was sep-arated according to the f
RM2R91FNP–Cleveland, Ohio: February, 1951 A worker using a large IBM Accounting Machine with punch cards at the Erie Railroad offices.
RMHRHCKK–Punch Card
RM2K5FTKY–D Day monument at Bletchley Park, in the form of a punch card.
RMDDTF2B–Hollerith data machine in an office at the Edgar Allen Steel Co, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, 1963. Artist: Michael Walters
RM2R2G51H–IBM: The historic Hollerith punch was used to record data on punched cards. Punch cards were an important tool for data entry and data processing
RMHRKKRR–IBM Punch Cards
RM2K5FW3Y–D Day monument at Bletchley Park, in the form of a punch card.
RMDDTF2G–Tabulating machines in the punch room in a Sheffield Factory office, 1963. Artist: Michael Walters
RMHRHCKF–Punch Cards
RMHRHCKE–Punch Cards
RMG15TF3–The original Hollerith electric tabulating system did not have an adequate method for sorting cards. This became a problem in the 1900 agricultural census, so Herman Hollerith developed an automatic sorter. The first one was a tabletop model with the bins
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