
This site covers the Burroughs office computers
sold during the 1970s and early 1980s. This includes:
Burroughs had peen a pioneer of mechanical office systems - the original Mr Burroughs
was credited with inventing the commercial adding machine.
These adding machines became more and more complex - they could add up not
just decimal amounts but also British pounds, shillings and pence (12 pence
to a shilling, 20 shillings to a pound) - which most of us would have
difficulty doing by hand even today! Adding machines were built with
multiple "registers", so that they could add up multiple columns of figures
separately, and keep a separate total for each column. They grew to
become "comptometers".
Comptometers had "full keyboards" - a column of values from 0 to 9 for each decimal
position. To register a value such as 7435.62 (seven symbols), the operator
didn't make seven successive key depressions - all seven key depressions were made
simultaneously! The operator positioned the fingers of both hands to be able
to register the whole number with just one "push". A "comptometer operator"
was considered to be a highly-skilled and (relatively) highly-paid member of the
office staff, who could achieve a productivity of up to 25,000 key depressions per
hour.
Comptometers grew in width not only to contain their complex mechanisms, but also to
be able to print across wider sheets of paper and record cards. They became
"accounting machines". They were used to mechanize existing office processes
- not to change them. An accounting sales ledger book would have been just that - a
book - with one page for each customer record. With the introduction of an
accounting machine into an organization, this page was replaced by record card, so
that each page (each card) could be processed separately by the accounting machines.
The mechanical insides of the accounting machines gave way to electro-mechanics
- first with vacuum tubes, electrical circuitry and mechanical parts, then the
tubes were replaced by transistors, and then the transistors were replace by chips.
From these developed the modern-day office computers. Next time that you look at a
spreadsheet on your PC, think back to those ledger cards that were used in those clunky old
accounting machines. Maybe things haven't changed all that much after all!
If you worked with these systems back in the 1970s or early '80s, why not drop me an email?
Why not read some of the Memories from other visitors
around the world?
Take a look at the Photo Gallery to see what these
computers looked like!

Last modified:04 January 2008