. • The
Compatible Time-Sharing System (CTSS), the first general purpose
time-sharing operating system, developed at
MIT's Computation Center on three successive computers, an IBM 709, 7090 and 7094 with
RPQs for additional features. It eventually ran on two separate 7094s, one of them at
Project MAC. •
NASA used 7090s, and, later, 7094s to control the
Mercury and
Gemini space flights.
Goddard Space Flight Center operated three 7094s. During the early
Apollo Program, a 7094 was kept operational to run flight planning software that had not yet been ported to mission control's newer
System/360 computers. • Caltech/NASA
Jet Propulsion Laboratory had three 7094s in the Space Flight Operations Facility (SFOF, building 230), fed via tape using several 1401s, and two 7094/7044 direct-coupled systems (in buildings 125 and 156). • Erhard Glatzel used an IBM 7090 to assist in calculations for the design of the
Carl Zeiss Planar 50mm f/0.7 lens commissioned by NASA. This lens was also used by
Stanley Kubrick to shoot candlelit scenes in
Barry Lyndon. • An IBM 7090 was installed at LASL, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory (Now
Los Alamos National Laboratory). • In 1961, Alexander Hurwitz used a 7090 to discover two
Mersenne primes, with 1,281 and 1,332 digits—the
largest known prime number at the time. • In 1961,
Michael Minovitch used
UCLA's 7090 to tackle the
three-body problem. His research was the scientific foundation of
NASA's
Planetary Grand Tour project. • On February 13, 1961, an IBM 7090 was installed at the Woomera Long Range Weapons Establishment in Southern Australia. • In 1962, a pair of 7090s in
Briarcliff Manor, New York, were the basis for the original version of the
SABRE airlines reservation system introduced by American Airlines. • The IBM 7090 was the first computer to fully sing a song using only synthesizers.
Daisy Bell and a collection of 17 other songs was released as
Music from Mathematics on Decca Records in 1962. • The composer
Iannis Xenakis wrote his piece "Atrées" using an IBM 7090 at
Place Vendôme, Paris. • In 1962,
Daniel Shanks and
John Wrench used an IBM 7090 to compute the first 100,000 digits of . • In 1963, three 7090 systems were imported into and installed in Japan, one each at Mitsubishi Nuclear Power Co. (whose DP division later merged with
Mitsubishi Research Institute, Inc.), IBM Japan's
data center in
Tokyo, and
Toshiba in
Kawasaki. They were mainly used for scientific computing. • In 1964, an early version of
TRACE, a high-precision
orbit determination and orbit propagation program, was used on an IBM 7090 computer. •
Operation Match, the first computer dating service in the U.S., begun in 1965, used a 7090 at the Avco service bureau in Wilmington, Massachusetts. • In 1967, Roger N. Shepard adapted M.V. Mathews' algorithm using an IBM 7090 to synthesize
Shepard tones. • American composer
Gerald Strang used the 7090/7094 for his series of works under the title
Compusition, composed between 1969 and 1972 at
Bell Labs. • The US Air Force retired its last 7090s in service from the
Ballistic Missile Early Warning System ("BMEWS") in the 1980s after almost 30 years of use. 7090 serial number 1 and serial number 3 were installed at
Thule Air Base in
Greenland for this application. • The US Navy continued to use a 7094 at
Pacific Missile Test Center,
Point Mugu,
California through much of the 1980s, although a "retirement" ceremony was held in July 1982. Not all of the applications had been to its a dual-processor
CDC Cyber 175.
In the media • A 7090/1401 installation is featured in the motion picture
Dr. Strangelove, with the
1403 printer playing a pivotal role in the plot • An IBM 7090 is featured in the 2016 American biographical film
Hidden Figures. • IBM 7094 specs are visible scrolling on a screen in the 1997 film
Event Horizon. == Competitors ==