The department was founded as the
Mathematical Laboratory under the leadership of
John Lennard-Jones on 14 May 1937, though it did not get properly established until after
World War II. The new laboratory was housed in the North Wing of the former Anatomy School, on the
New Museums Site. Upon its foundation, it was intended "to provide a computing service for general use, and to be a centre for the development of computational techniques in the University". In October 1946, work began under
Maurice Wilkes on
EDSAC (
Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator), which subsequently became the world's first fully operational and practical
stored program computer when it ran its first program on 6 May 1949. It inspired the world's first business computer,
LEO. It was replaced by
EDSAC 2, the first microcoded and
bit-sliced computer, in 1958. The
Cambridge Diploma in Computer Science was the world's first postgraduate taught course in computing, starting in 1953. In 1961,
David Hartley developed
Autocode, one of the first
high-level programming languages, for
EDSAC 2. Also in that year, proposals for
Titan, based on the
Ferranti Atlas machine, were developed. Titan became fully operational in 1964 and EDSAC 2 was retired the following year. In 1967, a full (24/7) multi-user time-shared service for up to 64 users was inaugurated on Titan. In 1970, the Mathematical Laboratory was renamed the
Computer Laboratory, with separate departments for Teaching and Research and the Computing Service, providing computing services to the university and its colleges. The two did not fully separate until 2001, when the Computer Laboratory moved out to the new William Gates building in
West Cambridge, off
Madingley Road, leaving behind an independent
Computing Service. In 2002, the Computer Laboratory launched the
Cambridge Computer Lab Ring, a graduate society designed by Stephen Allott and named after the
Cambridge Ring network. == Current ==