Crane was born in 1927 in
Jersey City, New Jersey. After a stint in the
United States Navy as a radar technician during
World War II, he worked as a computer maintenance technician for
IBM (1949–1952), followed by working on digital computer design under the leadership of
John von Neumann at the
Institute for Advanced Study, in Princeton, New Jersey (IAS is not affiliated with Princeton University). He then developed magnetic multiaperture devices (MADs) at RCA Laboratories (now
Sarnoff Corporation). In order to develop magnetic logic, Crane controlled the direction of bit flow in
magnetic ferrite memory cores.
Ferrite logic circuits are inherently more stable than
vacuum tubes and
transistors, draw no power when unused, and are impervious to electromagnetic interference. In 1959, Crane introduced the all-magnetic logic approach at the
Fall Joint Computer Conference, eventually leading to a demonstration of the world's first all-magnetic computer in 1961. The technology was soon commercialized by Aircraft Marine Products (AMP) Inc., under license from SRI, and used primarily in the rapid transit system of
New York City and at railroad switching yards, where electro-magnetic interference made electronic computers unfeasible. The development and growth of planar transistors in
silicon chips and
integrated circuits displaced magnetic core logic, although it may still be useful for extended space missions and other extreme conditions, but using integrated circuit manufacturing techniques (e.g. etching and deposition of a substrate, and not an assembly of discrete magnetic cores). The prototype of the first all-magnetic computer now resides at the
Computer History Museum, in Mountain View, California.
Douglas Engelbart worked with Crane on magnetic logic devices beginning in 1957, before Engelbart moved on to work on hypermedia and augmenting the human intellect with computers, and before Crane began research on replicating human functions with digital computers. In addition to his engineering work at SRI, Crane cofounded Communication Intelligence Corporation (CIC), to commercialize computer-based
handwriting recognition on
graphics tablets. CIC's "Jot" handwriting recognition software was later acquired by
Palm and renamed
Graffiti 2. == Later career ==