Anonymous, Answers by ENY: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, ENIAC, Newsweek, vol. 27, Feb. 18, 1946, p. 76.
Anonymous, Adds in ¹/₅₀₀₀ Second: Electronic Computing Machine at the University of Pennsylvania, Science News Letter, vol. 49, Feb. 23, 1946, p. 113 ...
Anonymous, ENIAC: at the University of Pennsylvania, Time, vol. 47, Feb. 25, 1946, p. 90.
Anonymous, It Thinks with Electrons; the ENIAC, Popular Mechanics, vol. 85, June 1946, p. 139.
Anonymous, Electronic Calculator: ENIAC, Scientific American, vol. 174, June 1946, p. 248.
BELL LABORATORIES RELAY COMPUTERS
As yet no full-scale scientific report is available on the Bell Laboratories general-purpose relay computers that went to Aberdeen and Langley Field. However, there is some information about these and other Bell Laboratories relay computing machines in the following articles:
Alt, Franz L., A Bell Telephone Laboratories’ Computing Machine (two parts), Mathematical Tables and Other Aids to Computation, vol. 3, no. 21, Jan. 1948, pp. 1-13, and vol. 3, no. 22, Apr. 1948, pp. 69-84.
Cesareo, O., The Relay Interpolator, Bell Laboratories Record, vol. 24, no. 12, Dec. 1946, pp. 457-460.
Juley, Joseph, The Ballistic Computer, Bell Laboratories Record, vol. 25, no. 1, Jan. 1947, pp. 5-9.