Genet, N., Got a Problem? Harvard’s Amazing New Mathematical Robot, Scholastic, vol. 45, Sept. 18, 1944, p. 35.
Torrey, V., Robot Mathematician Knows All the Answers, Popular Science, vol. 145, Oct. 1944, pp. 86-89....
Anonymous, Giant New Calculator, Science News Letter, vol. 46, Aug. 12, 1944, p. 111.
Anonymous, Mathematical Robot Presented to Harvard, Time, vol. 44, Aug. 14, 1944, p. 72.
Anonymous, World’s Greatest Machine for Automatic Calculation, Science News Letter, vol. 46, Aug. 19, 1944, p. 123.
Anonymous, Superbrain, Nation’s Business, vol. 32, Sept. 1944, p. 8.
Anonymous, Robot Works Problems Never Before Solved, Popular Mechanics, vol. 82, Oct. 1944, p. 13.
ENIAC, THE ELECTRONIC NUMERIC
INTEGRATOR AND CALCULATOR
There is as yet no full-scale, published scientific account of the Eniac. At the Ballistic Research Laboratories, Aberdeen, Md., where the machine now is, there are a few copies of some long mimeographed reports on the machine and the way it works. These were prepared by H. H. Goldstine and others when at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering, as a part of the contract under which the machine was constructed for the U. S. Government. It is possible that these reports might be consulted on request by serious students.
Some scientific descriptions of the machine and its properties are: