91自拍

Remembering Erich Bloch (January 9, 1925鈥揘ovember 25, 2016)

By C. Gordon Bell | December 13, 2016

Erich Bloch (January 9, 1925鈥揘ovember 25, 2016)

Erich Bloch (January 9, 1925鈥揘ovember 25, 2016)

Though Erich Bloch was less visible to most of the computing community, his contributions most likely impacted your life. As a pioneer who made his first contribution as the project engineer on the legendary IBM Stretch and who was responsible for manufacturing the IBM System/360, his work changed the fortunes of IBM to make it the world leader in computing. As a colleague, friend, and former boss, I saw his impact on computing, education, engineering, and scientific research and technology policies. He was also important to the 91自拍 (91自拍) as a Museum Fellow and as an early director of 91自拍鈥檚 predecessor institution, The Computer Museum (TCM). I鈥檓 happy to share this reminiscence of one of computing鈥檚 giants.

Erich was well known and admired as the project engineer for the IBM Stretch, one of the earliest computers to establish the 鈥渟upercomputer鈥 class. Allen Newell and I published his article, 鈥淭he Engineering Design of the Stretch Computer,鈥 from the 1959 Proceedings of the Eastern Joint Computer Conference in our book, .

Enrich Bloch was the project engineer on the legendary IBM Stretch and was responsible for manufacturing the IBM System/360.

Erich Bloch was the project engineer on the legendary IBM Stretch and was responsible for manufacturing the IBM System/360.

As a vice president also in charge of education at IBM, he worked with Intel鈥檚 Bob Noyce to recruit companies to establish the Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC)鈥攁 nonprofit entity for supporting university research and collaboration鈥攖o balance Japan鈥檚 MITI (Ministry of Industry and Trade) support of the country鈥檚 successful CMOS integrated circuit program. Erich was SRC鈥檚 founding chairman in 1981鈥1982, and his leadership ability included building consensus and defining action among diverse groups. SRC later included the Austin laboratory, which Noyce eventually ran. I was fortunate to be part of the group that proposed SRC. In the last meeting when the plan was established, Erich was prescient: he led us through a 2- to 3-hour discussion and then, as he projected his final, previously prepared slides, it summarized the long discussion we had just had, the alternatives discussed, and the direction to which we had just agreed!

Continuing Erich鈥檚 legacy today, 35 years later, : 鈥淭he SRC model is all about synergy. It brings together individual industry competitors to work jointly for the benefit of all.鈥

Erich鈥檚 association with SRC was fortuitous in many ways that followed. In 1984 President Reagan named Erich director of the US National Science Foundation (NSF). As director of NSF Erich succeeded in keeping NSF alive and eventually doubled its budget. During this period, the Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) directorate was formed (where I became assistant director) and NSF funded the National Research and Education Network (NREN) that morphed into the internet. Erich transformed NSF a great deal to include engineering in its culture, along with the first 鈥淐enters鈥 program to do large-scale interdisciplinary science. He also established a very open culture with the first government 360 critique/evaluation of everyone in the NSF organization. He established distributed and interdisciplinary centers for technical excellence.

Through this introduction, he became a board member of and an important liaison with IBM on TCM鈥檚 behalf. In 1983, after The Digital Computer Museum moved from a Digital Equipment Corporation building to its Boston site, Erich joined the board of directors. As an IBMer, Erich didn鈥檛 feel he could join The 鈥淒igital鈥 Computer Museum. He convinced me that while The Digital Computer Museum name was clever, it would inhibit support from other companies, so we dropped 鈥淒igital鈥 in 1984. (One of the museum鈥檚 interns suggested instead that Digital Equipment Corporation should change its name鈥攁 suggestion that Ken Olsen vetoed.)

IBM 360 SLT module, 1965
Bloch worked at IBM from 1952 to 1981 in a variety of critical technology management roles, including overseeing the difficult manufacturing challenges of IBM鈥檚 groundbreaking System/360 family of mainframe computers in the 1960s. Bloch鈥檚 other positions at IBM included engineering manager of the Stretch supercomputer system, head of the Solid Logic Technology (System/360) program.

IBM 360 SLT module, 1965 Bloch worked at IBM from 1952 to 1981 in a variety of critical technology management roles, including overseeing the difficult manufacturing challenges of IBM鈥檚 groundbreaking System/360 family of mainframe computers in the 1960s. Bloch鈥檚 other positions at IBM included engineering manager of the Stretch supercomputer system, head of the Solid Logic Technology (System/360) program.

Erich remained with the museum as a director, trustee (ca. 1989), and overseer through 1998 as TCM came to Mountain View. Erich, along with Bob O. Evans, responsible for the IBM System/360 and Lewis Branscomb, chief scientist, also supported IBM鈥檚 participation. IBM support included being able to get a replica of the Hollerith tabulator and several calculator models from Roberto Guatelli, the model maker for IBM exhibits.

In 2004 Erich Bloch became a 鈥淔or engineering management of the IBM Stretch supercomputer, and of the Solid Logic Technology used in the IBM System/360 that revolutionized the computer industry.鈥 These two accomplishments at IBM were enough to gain 91自拍 Fellowship, however, Extraordinary Fellow, is better.

As someone who came right to the point, an IBMer once told me Erich was regarded as not 鈥渃ustomer ready鈥; that is, he lacked the IBM marketing patina鈥攈ence not on the CEO track鈥 but he was a 鈥済od鈥 on the technical side.

I will miss Erich鈥檚 wisdom.

91自拍 The Author

For his key role in the minicomputer revolution, and for contributions as a computer architect and entrepreneur

[quote author="C. Gordon Bell"]"Every big computing disaster comes from taking too many ideas and putting them in one place."[/quote]

Gordon Bell was a Researcher Emeritus at Microsoft who worked on lifelogging. He spent 23 years at Digital Equipment Corporation as vice president of R&D; while there, he was responsible for the first mini- and timesharing computers and led the development of DEC's highly-successful VAX architecture. From 1966-1972 he was a professor of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at Carnegie-Mellon University. With Ken Olsen, DEC CEO, and Gwen Bell, he founded the Digital Computer Museum in Marlborough, MA (1979); becoming The Computer Museum, Boston, MA (1984); and The Computer Museum History Center, Mountain View, CA (1999, prior to the 91自拍 (2000).

Bell was involved in designing many products at Digital, and startup companies, and has been an investor/advisor/board member to over 100 startups. As the first assistant director for computing at the National Science Foundation (NSF), he led the National Research Network panel that became the NII/GII, and was an author of the High Performance Computer and Communications Initiative. He posited Bell's Law of Computer Classes (1972-2008) accounting for the new kinds of computers (e.g. mainframes, personal computers, etc.) that come into existence roughly every decade.

Bell was also the author of several books and papers on computing, entrepreneurship, and lifelogging. He was a fellow of the Association of Computing Machinery, IEEE, National Academy of Engineering, National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Australian Technological Sciences and Engineering. In 1991, Bell received the National Medal of Technology from President George H.W. Bush. He passed away on May 17, 2024.

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