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Punch card



 
 
A punch card or punched card (or punchcard or Hollerith
Herman Hollerith

Herman Hollerith was a German-American statistician who developed a mechanical Tabulating machine based on punched cards in order to rapidly tabulate statistics from millions of pieces of data....
 card
or IBM card), is a piece of stiff paper
Paperboard

Paperboard is a paper-like material, usually over ten mils in thickness. Some types of paperboard are used in the construction of Corrugated fiberboard....
 that contains digital information represented by the presence or absence of holes in predefined positions. Now almost an obsolete recording medium, punched cards were widely used throughout the 19th century for controlling textile looms
Loom

A loom is a machine or device for weaving thread or yarn into textiles. Looms can range from very small hand-held frames, to large free-standing hand looms, to huge automatic mechanical devices....
 and in the late 19th and early 20th century for operating fairground organ
Fairground organ

A fairground organ is a pipe organ designed for use in a commercial public fairground setting to provide loud music to accompany fairground rides and attractions....
s and related instruments.






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A punch card or punched card (or punchcard or Hollerith
Herman Hollerith

Herman Hollerith was a German-American statistician who developed a mechanical Tabulating machine based on punched cards in order to rapidly tabulate statistics from millions of pieces of data....
 card
or IBM card), is a piece of stiff paper
Paperboard

Paperboard is a paper-like material, usually over ten mils in thickness. Some types of paperboard are used in the construction of Corrugated fiberboard....
 that contains digital information represented by the presence or absence of holes in predefined positions. Now almost an obsolete recording medium, punched cards were widely used throughout the 19th century for controlling textile looms
Loom

A loom is a machine or device for weaving thread or yarn into textiles. Looms can range from very small hand-held frames, to large free-standing hand looms, to huge automatic mechanical devices....
 and in the late 19th and early 20th century for operating fairground organ
Fairground organ

A fairground organ is a pipe organ designed for use in a commercial public fairground setting to provide loud music to accompany fairground rides and attractions....
s and related instruments. It was used through the 20th century in unit record machines
Unit record equipment

Before the advent of electronic computers, data processing was performed using electromechanical devices called unit record equipment, electric accounting machines or tabulating machines....
 for input, processing, and data storage
Computer storage

Computer data storage, often called storage or memory, refers to computer components, devices, and recording medium that retain digital data used for computing for some interval of time....
. Early digital computers used punched cards as the primary medium for input of both computer program
Computer program

Computer programs are Instruction for a computer. A computer requires programs to function. Moreover, a computer program does not run unless its instructions are executed by a Central processing unit; however, a program may communicate an Algorithm#Formalization of algorithms to people without running....
s and data
Data (computing)

In computer science, data is anything in a form suitable for use with a computer. Data is often distinguished from computer programs. A program is a set of instruction that detail a task for the computer to perform....
, with offline data entry on key punch
Key punch

File:IBM card punch 029.JPGA key punch is a device for entering data into punched cards by precisely punching holes at locations designated by the keys struck by the operator....
 machines. Some voting machine
Voting machine

Voting machines are the total combination of mechanical, electromechanical, or electronic equipment , that is used to define ballots; to cast and count votes; to report or display election results; and to maintain and produce any audit trail information....
s use punched cards.

History

Jacquard
Punched cards were first used around 1725 by Basile Bouchon
Basile Bouchon

Basile Bouchon was a textile worker in the silk center in Lyon who invented a way to control a loom with a perforated paper tape in 1725. The son of an organ maker, Bouchon partially automated the tedious setting up process of the drawloom in which an operator lifted the warp threads using cords....
 and Jean-Baptiste Falcon as a more robust form of the perforated paper rolls then in use for controlling textile looms
Loom

A loom is a machine or device for weaving thread or yarn into textiles. Looms can range from very small hand-held frames, to large free-standing hand looms, to huge automatic mechanical devices....
 in France. This technique was greatly improved by Joseph Marie Jacquard
Joseph Marie Jacquard

Joseph Marie Charles nicknamed Jacquard was a straw hat maker before becoming a French silk weaver and inventor. He improved on the original punched card design of Jacques de Vaucanson's loom of 1745, to invent the Jacquard loom mechanism in 1804-1805....
 in his Jacquard loom
Jacquard loom

The Jacquard Loom is a mechanical loom, invented by Joseph Marie Jacquard in 1801, that simplifies the process of manufacturing textiles with complex patterns such as brocade, damask, and matelasse....
 in 1801. Charles Babbage
Charles Babbage

Charles Babbage, Royal Society was an England mathematician, philosopher, inventor and mechanical engineer who originated the concept of a programmable computer....
 launched the idea of the use of the punched cards as a way to control a mechanical calculator he designed. Herman Hollerith
Herman Hollerith

Herman Hollerith was a German-American statistician who developed a mechanical Tabulating machine based on punched cards in order to rapidly tabulate statistics from millions of pieces of data....
 developed punched card data processing technology for the 1890 US census
United States Census, 1890

The Eleventh United States Census was taken June 2, 1890. Most of the 1890 census was destroyed in 1921 during a fire in the basement of the Commerce Building in Washington, D.C....
 and founded the Tabulating Machine Company (1896) which was one of three companies that merged to form Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation (CTR)
Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation (CTR)

The Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation was incorporated on June 15 1911 in Endicott, New York a few miles west of Binghamton, New York....
, later renamed IBM. IBM manufactured and marketed a variety of unit record machines for creating, sorting, and tabulating punched cards, even after expanding into computers in the late 1950s. IBM developed punch card technology into a powerful tool for business data-processing and produced an extensive line of general purpose unit record machines
Unit record equipment

Before the advent of electronic computers, data processing was performed using electromechanical devices called unit record equipment, electric accounting machines or tabulating machines....
. By 1950, the IBM card and IBM unit record machines had become ubiquitous in industry and government. "Do not fold, spindle or mutilate," a generalized version of the warning that appeared on some punched cards, became a motto for the post-World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 era (even though many people had no idea what spindle
Spindle (stationery)

A spindle is an upright spike used to hold papers waiting for processing. "Spindling" or "spiking" was the act of spearing a paper document onto the spike....
 meant).
Punch Card Blue
From the 1900s, into the 1950s, punched cards were the primary medium for data entry, data storage
Computer storage

Computer data storage, often called storage or memory, refers to computer components, devices, and recording medium that retain digital data used for computing for some interval of time....
, and processing in institutional computing. According to the IBM Archives: "By 1937... IBM had 32 presses at work in Endicott, N.Y., printing, cutting and stacking five to 10 million punched cards every day." Punched cards were even used as legal documents, such as U.S. Government checks and savings bonds. During the 1960s, the punched card was gradually replaced as the primary means for data storage
Computer storage

Computer data storage, often called storage or memory, refers to computer components, devices, and recording medium that retain digital data used for computing for some interval of time....
 by magnetic tape
Magnetic tape data storage

Magnetic tape has been used for data storage for over 50 years. In this time, many advances in tape formulation, packaging, and data density have been made....
, as better, more capable computers became available. Punched cards were still commonly used for data entry and programing until the mid-1970s when the combination of lower cost magnetic disk storage, and affordable interactive terminals on less expensive minicomputer
Minicomputer

A minicomputer is a class of multi-user computers that lies in the middle range of the computing spectrum, in between the largest multi-user systems and the smallest single-user systems ....
s made punched cards obsolete for this role as well. However, their influence lives on through many standard conventions and file formats. The terminals that replaced the punched cards, the IBM 3270
IBM 3270

The IBM 3270 is a class of computer terminal made by IBM since 1972 normally used to communicate with IBM mainframes. As such, it was the successor to the IBM 2260 display terminal....
 for example, displayed 80 columns of text in text mode
Text mode

Text mode is a kind of computer display mode in which the content of the screen is internally represented in terms of textual characters rather than individual pixels....
, for compatibility with existing software. Some programs still operate on the convention of 80 text columns, although fewer and fewer do as newer systems employ graphical user interface
Graphical user interface

A graphical user interface is a type of user interface which allows people to human-computer interaction such as computers; hand-held devices such as MP3 Players, Portable Media Players or Gaming devices; household appliances and office equipment....
s with variable-width type fonts.

Today punched cards are mostly obsolete and replaced with other storages methods, except for a few legacy system
Legacy system

A legacy system is an old computer system or application program that continues to be used, typically because it still functions for the users' needs, even though newer technology is available....
s and specialized applications.

Card formats

The early applications of punched cards all used specifically designed card layouts. It wasn't until around 1928 that punched cards and machines were made "general purpose". The rectangular, round, or oval bits of paper punched out are called chad (recently, chads) or chips (in IBM usage). Multi-character data, such as words or large numbers, were stored in adjacent card columns known as fields. A group of cards is called a deck. One upper corner of a card was usually cut so that cards not oriented correctly, or cards with different corner cuts, could be easily identified. Cards were commonly printed so that the row and column position of a punch could be identified. For some applications printing might have included fields, named and marked by vertical lines, logos, and more.

One of the most common printed punched cards was the IBM
IBM

International Business Machines Corporation, abbreviated IBM and nicknamed "Big Blue" , is a multinational corporation computer technology and consulting corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York, New York, United States....
 5081. Indeed, it was so common that other card vendors used the same number (see image at right) and even users knew its number.

Hollerith's punch card formats

The punched card Herman Hollerith
Herman Hollerith

Herman Hollerith was a German-American statistician who developed a mechanical Tabulating machine based on punched cards in order to rapidly tabulate statistics from millions of pieces of data....
 patented on June 8, 1887 and used with mechanical tabulating machines in the 1890 U.S. Census
United States Census Bureau

The United States Census Bureau is the government agency that is responsible for the United States Census. It also gathers other national demographic and economic data....
, was a piece of cardboard about 90 mm by 215 mm, with round holes and 24 columns. This card can be seen at the Columbia University Computing History site.

This card was the same size as a US paper dollar of the time. Suggested reasons for making it this size are:
  • Hollerith felt that people would treat it with respect if it was this size.
  • boxes of this size were readily available at cheap prices, designed for use by banks to store currency.
  • equipment to handle media of this size was available to the United States Census Bureau
    United States Census Bureau

    The United States Census Bureau is the government agency that is responsible for the United States Census. It also gathers other national demographic and economic data....
     from the United States Department of the Treasury
    United States Department of the Treasury

    The Department of the Treasury is an United States federal executive departments and the treasury of the United States Federal government of the United States....
    .
But there is no actual evidence to prove that any of these suggestions is correct.

Hollerith's 45 column punched cards are illustrated in Comrie's The application of the Hollerith Tabulating Machine to Brown's Tables of the Moon.

UNIVAC 90-character punch card format

The Remington-Rand UNIVAC
UNIVAC

UNIVAC is the name of a business unit and division of the Remington Rand company formed by the 1950 purchase of the Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation, founded four years earlier by ENIAC inventors J....
 card format had round holes. There were 45 columns with 12 punch locations each, two characters to each column. For the 90-column card character codings, see

IBM 80 column punch card format

Fortrancardproj039
This IBM
IBM

International Business Machines Corporation, abbreviated IBM and nicknamed "Big Blue" , is a multinational corporation computer technology and consulting corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York, New York, United States....
 card format, designed in 1928, had rectangular holes, 80 columns with 12 punch locations each, one character to each column. Card size was exactly 7-3/8 inch by 3-1/4 inch (187.325 by 82.55 mm). The cards were made of smooth stock, 0.007 inch (0.178 mm) thick. There are about 143 cards to the inch. In 1964, IBM changed from square to round corners.

The lower ten positions represented (from top to bottom) the digits 0 through 9. The top two positions of a column were called zone punches, 12 (top) and 11. Originally only numeric information was coded, with 1 punch per column indicating the digit. Signs could be added to a field by overpunching the least significant digit
Least significant bit

In computing, the least significant bit is the bit position in a Binary numeral system integer giving the units value, that is, determining whether the number is even or odd....
 with a zone punch: 12 for plus and 11 for minus. Zone punches had other uses in processing as well, such as indicating a master record.

Later, codes were introduced for upper-case letters and special characters. A column with 2 punches (zone [12,11,0] + digit [1-9]) was a letter; 3 punches (zone [12,11,0] + digit [2-4] + 8) was a special character. The introduction of EBCDIC
EBCDIC

Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code is an 8-bit character encoding used on IBM mainframe operating systems such as z/OS, OS/390, VM and VSE , as well as IBM midrange computer operating systems such as OS/400 and i5/OS ....
 in 1964 allowed columns with as many as 6 punches (zones [12,11,0,8,9] + digit [1-7]). IBM and other manufacturers used many different 80-column card character codings.

Ibm1130copycard
For some computer applications, binary
Binary numeral system

The binary numeral system, or notation with a radix of 2. Owing to its straightforward implementation in digital electronic circuitry using logic gates, the binary system is used internally by all modern computers....
 formats were used, where each hole represented a single binary digit (or "bit
Bit

A bit is a binary numeral system numerical digit, taking a value of either 0 or 1. Binary digits are a basic unit of information Computer data storage and transmission in digital computing and digital information theory....
"), every column (or row) was treated as a simple bitfield, and every combination of holes was permitted. For example, the 704/709/7090/7094 series
IBM 700/7000 series

The IBM 700/7000 series was a series of large scale computer systems made by International Business Machines through the 1950s and early 1960s....
 scientific computers treated every row as two 36-bit words, usually in columns 1-72, ignoring the last 8 columns (the 72 columns used were selectable using a control panel). Other computers, such as the IBM 1130
IBM 1130

The IBM 1130 Computing System was introduced in 1965. It was IBM's least-expensive computer to date, and was aimed at price-sensitive, computing-intensive technical markets like education and engineering....
 or System/360
System/360

The IBM System/360 is a mainframe computer system family announced by IBM on April 7, 1964. It was the first family of computers making a clear distinction between computer architecture and implementation, allowing IBM to release a suite of compatible designs at different price points....
, used every column. For operator and visitor amusement, in binary mode, cards could be punched where every possible punch position had a hole: these were called "lace card
Lace card

A lace card is a punch card with all holes punched . Card readers tended to jam when a lace card was inserted, as the resulting card had too little structural strength to avoid buckling inside the mechanism....
s" (such cards lacked structural strength and generally could not be further processed by unit record machines).

The 80-column card format dominated the industry, becoming known as just IBM cards, even though other companies made cards and equipment to process them.

Mark sense cards

  • Mark sense
    Mark sense

    Electrographic is a term used for punched card and page scanning technology that allowed cards or pages marked with a pencil to be processed or converted into punch card....
     (Electrographic) cards, developed by Reynold B. Johnson
    Reynold B. Johnson

    Reynold "Rey" Johnson was an United States inventor and computer pioneer. A long-time employee of IBM, Johnson is said to be the "father" of the disk drive....
     at IBM, had printed ovals that could be marked with a special electrographic pencil. Cards would typically be punched with some initial information, such as the name and location of an inventory item. Information to be added, such as quantity of the item on hand, would be marked in the ovals. Card punches with an option to detect mark sense cards could then punch the corresponding information into the card.


Aperture cards

  • Aperture card
    Aperture card

    An aperture card is a type of punched card with a cut-out window into which a chip of microform is mounted. Such a card is used for archive or for making multiple inexpensive copies of a document for ease of distribution....
    s have a cut-out hole on the right side of the punched card. A 35 mm microfilm chip containing a microform
    Microform

    Microforms are any form, either photographic film or paper, containing microreproductions of documents for transmission, storage, reading, and printing....
     image is mounted in the hole. Aperture cards are used for engineering drawing
    Engineering drawing

    An engineering drawing, or Construction drawing, is a type of technical drawing, created within the technical drawing discipline, and used to fully and clearly define requirements for engineering items....
    s from all engineering disciplines. Information about the drawing, for example the drawing number, is typically punched and printed on the remainder of the card. Aperture cards have some advantages over digital systems for archival purposes.


IBM 51 column punch card format

This IBM card format was a shortened 80-column card; the shortening sometimes accomplished by tearing off, at a perforation, a stub from an 80 column card. These cards were used in some retail and inventory applications.

IBM Port-A-Punch

According to the IBM Archive: IBM's Supplies Division introduced the Port-A-Punch in 1958 as a fast, accurate means of manually punching holes in specially scored IBM punched cards. Designed to fit in the pocket, Port-A-Punch made it possible to create punched card documents anywhere. The product was intended for "on-the-spot" recording operations -- such as physical inventories, job tickets and statistical surveys -- because it eliminated the need for preliminary writing or typing of source documents.. Unfortunately, the resulting holes were "furry" and sometimes caused problems with the equipment used to read the cards.

IBM Votomatic

From the IBM Archive (1965): In the privacy of the voting booth, the IBM Votomatic was used to register selections on a specially designed punched card ballot..

Punch cards received considerable notoriety in 2000 when their uneven use in Votomatic style systems in Florida
Florida

Florida is a U.S. state located in the Southeastern United States of the United States, bordering Alabama to the northwest and Georgia to the northeast....
 was alleged to have affected the outcome of the U.S. presidential election
United States presidential election, 2000

The United States presidential election of 2000 was a contest between United States Democratic Party candidate Al Gore, then-Vice President of the United States, and United States Republican Party candidate George W....
. Invented by Joseph P. Harris, Votomatic was manufactured under license by IBM. William Rouverol, who built the prototype and wrote patents, stated that after the patents expired in 1982, lower quality machines had appeared on the market. The machines used in Florida had five times as many errors as a true Votomatic, he said.

Punch-card-based voting systems, the Votomatic
Electronic voting

Electronic voting is a term encompassing several different types of voting, embracing both electronic means of casting a vote and electronic means of counting votes....
 system in particular, use special cards where each possible hole is pre-scored, allowing perforations to be made by the voter pressing a stylus through a guide in the voting machine
Voting machine

Voting machines are the total combination of mechanical, electromechanical, or electronic equipment , that is used to define ballots; to cast and count votes; to report or display election results; and to maintain and produce any audit trail information....
. These pre-perforated cards are called Port-A-Punch cards (above). One notorious problem with this system is the incomplete punch; this can lead to a smaller hole than expected, or to a mere slit in the card, or to a mere dimple in the card, or to a hanging chad. This technical problem was claimed by the Democratic Party to have influenced the 2000 U.S. presidential election in the state of Florida
Florida

Florida is a U.S. state located in the Southeastern United States of the United States, bordering Alabama to the northwest and Georgia to the northeast....
; critics claimed that punch-card voting machines were primarily used in Democratic areas and that hundreds of ballots were not read properly or were disqualified due to incomplete punches, which allegedly tipped the vote in favor of George W. Bush
George W. Bush

George Walker Bush served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States from 2001 to 2009. He was the 46th List of Governors of Texas from 1995 to 2000 before being United States presidential inauguration as President on January 20, 2001....
 over Al Gore
Al Gore

Albert Arnold "Al" Gore, Jr. is an United States environmentalism activist who served as the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States from 1993 to 2001 under President of the United States Bill Clinton....
.

Other punch-card voting systems use a metal hole-punch mechanism that does not suffer nearly as much from this fault, although most states have eliminated punch-card voting systems of all types after the 2000 Florida experience. However countries like the Philippines
Philippines

The Philippines, officially known as the Republic of the Philippines, is a country in Southeast Asia with Manila as its capital city. It comprises 7,107 islands in the western Pacific Ocean....
 and South Korea
South Korea

South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea , ), often referred to as Korea and the "names of Korea#Revival of the names", is a Semi-presidential system republic in East Asia, located in the southern half of the Korean Peninsula....
 still predominantly use punch card ballots.

IBM 96 column punch card format

System 3 Punch Card
In the early 1970s IBM introduced a new, smaller, round-hole, 96-column card format along with the IBM System/3
System/3

File:IBM System3.JPGThe IBM System/3 was a low-end business computer aimed at new customers and organizations that still used IBM 1400 series computers or unit record equipment....
 computer. These cards had tiny (1 mm), circular holes, smaller than those in paper tape. Data was stored in six-bit binary-coded decimal
Binary-coded decimal

In computing and electronics systems, binary-coded decimal is an encoding for decimal numbers in which each digit is represented by its own binary sequence....
 code, with three rows of 32 characters each, or 8-bit EBCDIC
EBCDIC

Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code is an 8-bit character encoding used on IBM mainframe operating systems such as z/OS, OS/390, VM and VSE , as well as IBM midrange computer operating systems such as OS/400 and i5/OS ....
, with the two extra holes located in the top rows. For the 96-column card character codings, see

Punched card manufacturing


IBM's Fred M. Carroll developed a series of rotary type presses that were used to produce the well-known standard tabulating cards, including a 1921 model that operated at 400 cards per minute (cpm). Later, he developed completely different press capable of operating at speeds in excess of 800 cpm, and it was introduced in 1936. Carroll's high-speed press, containing a printing cylinder, revolutionized the manufacture of punched tabulating cards. It is estimated that between 1930 and 1950, the Carroll press accounted for as much as 25 per cent of the company's profits

Discarded printing plates from these card presses, each printing plate the size of an IBM card and formed into a cylinder, often found use as desk pen/pencil holders, and even today are collectable IBM artifacts (every card layout had its own printing plate).

IBM initially required that its customers use only IBM manufactured cards with IBM machines, which were leased, not sold. IBM viewed its business as providing a service and that the cards were part of the machine. In 1932 the government took IBM to court on this issue, IBM fought all the way to the Supreme Court and lost; the court ruling that IBM could only set card specifications. In another case, heard in 1955, IBM signed a consent decree
Consent decree

A consent decree is a Judiciary decree expressing a voluntary agreement between parties to a Lawsuit, especially an agreement by a defendant to cease activities alleged by the government to be illegal in return for an end to the indictment....
 requiring, amongst other things, that IBM would by 1962 have no more than one-half of the punched card manufacturing capacity in the United States. Tom Watson Jr.'s decision to sign this decree, where IBM saw the punched card provisions as the most significant point, completed the transfer of power to him from Thomas Watson, Sr
Thomas J. Watson

Thomas John Watson, Sr. was the United States president of International Business Machines , who oversaw that company's growth into an international force from the 1920s to the 1950s....
.

Ongoing cultural impact of punch cards

While punch cards have not been widely used for a generation, the impact was so great for most of the 20th century that they still appear from time to time in popular culture. For example:
  • Sculptor Maya Lin designed a controversial public art
    Public art

    |}The term public art properly refers to works of art in any Media that has been planned and executed with the specific intention of being sited or staged in the public domain, usually outside and accessible to all....
     installation at Ohio University
    Ohio University

    Ohio University is a public university located in Athens, Ohio that is situated on a 1,800 acre campus. Founded in 1804, it is the oldest college in Ohio, first in the Northwest Territory, and ninth oldest public university in the United States....
     that looks like a punch card from the air.
  • - a mail art exhibit by the Washington Pavilion in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
  • The Red McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin has artistic representations of punch cards decorating its exterior walls.


The use of punch cards also had a significant influence on the "programmer culture" at the height of punch card use in the 1960s and 1970s. The disappearance of the punch card from everyday use also had a significant effect on the perspective of the programmer, the sense of ownership in his or her work and the tangible properties of the program itself. An artifact of this early implicit standard is that most character-based terminals display 80 characters per row. Even now, the default size for character interfaces such as the MS-DOS command prompt in Windows remains set at 80 columns. The original 8" IBM floppy disk also had a sector size of 128 bytes; this was chosen because it was the smallest power of 2 which could contain the data from a single punch card.

Standards

  • ANSI INCITS 21-1967 (R2002), Rectangular Holes in Twelve-Row Punched Cards (formerly ANSI X3.21-1967 (R1997)) Specifies the size and location of rectangular holes in twelve-row 3-1/4 inch wide punched cards.
  • ANSI X3.11 - 1990 American National Standard Specifications for General Purpose Paper Cards for Information Processing
  • ANSI X3.26 - 1980/R1991) Hollerith Punched Card Code
  • ISO 1681:1973 Information processing - Unpunched paper cards - Specification
  • ISO 6586:1980 Data processing - Implementation of the ISO 7- bit and 8- bit coded character sets on punched cards. Defines ISO 7-bit and 8-bit character sets on punched cards as well as the representation of 7-bit and 8-bit combinations on 12-row punched cards. Derived from, and compatible with, the Hollerith Code, ensuring compatibility with existing punched card files.


See also

  • Key punch
    Key punch

    File:IBM card punch 029.JPGA key punch is a device for entering data into punched cards by precisely punching holes at locations designated by the keys struck by the operator....
  • Computer programming in the punch card era
    Computer programming in the punch card era

    From the invention of computer programming languages into the 1980s, many if not most computer programmers created, edited and stored their programs on punch cards....
  • Edge-notched card
    Edge-notched card

    Edge-notched cards, or McBee cards, were a manual data storage and manipulation technology invented in 1896 and used for specialized data storage and cataloging applications through much of the 20th century....
  • History of computing hardware
    History of computing hardware

    The history of computing hardware encompasses computer hardware, its Computer architecture, and its impact on Computer software.The elements of computing hardware have undergone significant improvement over their history....
  • Music roll
    Music roll

    A music roll is a storage medium used to operate a mechanical organ, carillon#Musical characteristics or orchestrion. Originally made of paper, modern rolls are sometimes made of thin plastic or PET film ....
  • Punched tape
    Punched tape

    Punched tape or paper tape is a largely obsolete form of data storage, consisting of a long strip of paper in which holes are punched to store data....
  • Perforated sheets
    Perforated sheets

    The method of perforated sheets was a cryptology technique used by the Poland Biuro Szyfr?w before and during World War II, and during the war also by British cryptologists at Bletchley Park, to decryption messages cipher on German Enigma machines....
  • IBM Millipede
    IBM Millipede

    Millipede is a non-volatile memory computer memory stored on nanoscopic pits burned into the surface of a thin polymer layer, read and written by a MEMS-based probe....
  • Perfin
    Perfin

    A perfin , also called SPIFS , is a pattern of tiny holes punched through a postage stamp. Organizations used perforating machines to make perforations forming letters or designs in postage stamps they purchased, often in bulk, with the purpose of discouraging pilferage....
  • IBM and the Holocaust
    IBM and the Holocaust

    IBM and the Holocaust is a book written by Edwin Black documenting the relationship between IBM and the Third Reich. It was published in 2001 by Three Rivers Press....


External links

* (Collection shows examples of left, right, and no corner cuts.)
  • - a U.S. company that converts punched cards to conventional media

  • Article about the programming culture that developed around use of the punch card, following Fisk's experience of "learning the craft" from people around him. Also, how the concept of programming changed significantly as the computer began to multi-task and store programs internally on disk... observing how the programmer's sense of possession/ownership of a program was somewhat relinquished after he no longer physically "held it in his hands" but trusted the computer to keep it safe for him.
    (recommended read for geeks and non-techies alike:JS)
  • article about modern-day use of punch cards* (Shows examples of both left and right corner cuts.)
  • - a U.S. company still supplying punch-card equipment and supplies .
  • in a German computer museum
  • *