Trade literature.

ArchivalResource

Trade literature.

Item : The new electric Model K comptometer, n.d. Item : IBM 650; New "business-minded" electronic computer now serves 9,000,000 John Hancock policyholders, 1954. Item : IBM data transceiver, 1954. Item : NORC; International Business Machines Corp., 1954. Item : For business, a new perspective, 1954. Item : Magnetic cores for microsecond memory in a great new IBM electric data processing machine for business; the 705 EDPM, 1954. Item : IBM micro records systems; total microfilm capability ... to meet specific information handling needs, [ca. 1957]. Item : Make your records work for you; the growing problem of information storage, retrieval, reference, [ca. 1957]. Item : Companies get things done at 14,000 operations a second with giant IBM electronic data processing machines, n.d.

9 items

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SNAC Resource ID: 8235838

Hagley Museum & Library

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International Business Machines Corporation

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6330m1p (corporateBody)

International Business Machines Corporation was incorporated in New York State on June 16, 1911 under the name Computing-Tabulating-Recording Co. In 1922, Computing-Tabulating-Recording Co. purchased all of the shares of Deutsche Hollerith Maschinen Gesellschaft. In 1924 the official name of the company was changed to International Business Machines Corporation. In 1933, IBM CEO Thomas Watson ordered the merger of IBM subsidiaries in Germany (Optima, Degemag, Holgemag, Dehomag) under the name De...