Modern Era · North America · Technology
1946
ENIAC unveiled at Penn
February 14, 1946
A thirty-ton tangle of vacuum tubes, capacitors, and plugboards filling a Philadelphia basement room became the first general-purpose electronic computer. ENIAC could do five thousand additions a second and broke down frequently. A small female team known as the ENIAC girls programmed it by rewiring. The digital age had turned on its first switch.