Gustav Tauschek

Informatician, inventor, engineer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gustav Tauschek (April 29, 1899, Vienna, Austria February 14, 1945, Zürich, Switzerland) was an Austrian pioneer of Information technology and developed numerous improvements for punched card-based calculating machines from 1922 to 1945.

Career

System Tauschek

From 1926 till 1930 Tauschek developed a complete punched card-based accounting system, which was never mass-produced.[1]

The system is currently stored in the archives of the Technisches Museum Wien.

Magnetic drum memory

In 1932 Tauschek built a magnetic drum memory.[2]

IBM

Throughout the 1930s Tauschek worked as a consultant to IBM. For IBM he built a reading-writing calculator and he constructed a range of data storage devices with magnetized steel plates. For IBM Tauschek also build a accounting machine that was capable of storing the records of 10,000 bank accounts.[3]

Later life and legacy

Gustav Tauschek died of an embolism on February 14, 1945 in a hospital in Zürich, Switzerland.

References

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