Title
Pioneering Work in the Field of Computer Process Control
Abstract
Dreams of using digital computers in industrial control systems surfaced almost as soon as such a computer was invented in the mid to late 1940s. By the early fifties, the concepts of such use were fairly well established. However, actual applications had to wait until relatively small, reliable, and also relatively inexpensive machines were available, along with vendor companies with the will and the initiative to pursue this field vigorously Such a company was the Ramo-Wooldridge Company, which entered this field in the mid-fifties. The company found ready acceptance of its products among the companies in the process industries. By the mid-sixties, there were installations in almost every process industry and many other vendors had entered the field. Such installations became the norm for computer applications to industrial control until the microprocessor and its associated distributed computer control systems superseded them beginning in the mid-seventies. The article chronicles the development of this early field by describing several of the early installations and their successes and difficulties
Year
DOI
Venue
1995
10.1109/85.366507
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
Keywords
Field
DocType
distributed computing,computer applications,control systems,industrial control systems,application software,history,process control,computer integrated manufacturing
Process industry,Software engineering,Microprocessor,Computer-integrated manufacturing,Vendor,Industrial control system,Computer Applications,Process control,Process (computing),Engineering
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
17
1
1058-6180
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
6
1.88
1
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Thomas M. Stout161.88
Theodore J. Williams218265.52