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See Z22 (handheld) for the Palm handheld The Z22 was the seventh computer model Konrad Zuse developed (the first six being the Z1, Z2, Z3, Z4, Z5 and Z11, respectively). One of the early commercial computers, the Z22's design was finished about 1955. The major version jump from Z11 to Z22 was due to the use of vacuum tubes, as opposed to the electromechanical systems used in earlier models. The first machines built were shipped to Berlin and Aachen. By the end of 1958 the ZMMD-group had built a working ALGOL 58 compiler for the Z22. ZMMD said Zürich (ie. Rutishauser), München (ie. Bauer, Samelson), Mainz (ie. Z22), Darmstadt (ie. Bottenbruch). In 1961 the Z22 was followed by a logically very similar transistorized version, the Z23. The University of Applied Sciences, Karlsruhe still has an operational Z22 which is on permanent loan at the ZKM in Karlsruhe. Technical dataThe typical setup of a Z22 was:
The Z22 operated at 3kHz operating frequency, which was synchronous with the speed of the drum storage. The input of data was not only possible via punch-card reader, but also by directly programming drum storage or core memory using pushbuttons. The Z22 also had glow-lamps which showed the memory- and machine state as output. ProgrammingThe Z22 was designed to be easier to program than previous first generation computers. It was programmed in machine code with 38 bit instruction words, consisting of 5 fields:
There also was an assembly-like programming language called "Freiburger Code". It was designed to make programming programs for solving mathematical problems easier than writing machine code, and reportedly did so. External links
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