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GEC Computers Limited was a British computer manufacturing company under the
GEC GEC or Gec may refer to: Education * Gedo Education Committee, in Somalia * Glen Eira College, in Caulfield East, Victoria, Australia * Goa Engineering College, India * Government Engineering College (disambiguation) * Guild for Exceptional ...
holding company from 1968 until the 1990s.


History

Starting life as Elliott Automation, in 1967–68 the data processing computer products were transferred to ICT/ICL and non-computing products to
English Electric N.º UIC: 9094 110 1449-3 (Takargo Rail) The English Electric Company Limited (EE) was a British industrial manufacturer formed after the Armistice of 11 November 1918, armistice of World War I by amalgamating five businesses which, during th ...
as part of a reorganisation of the parent company forced by the British Government. English Electric then merged into the GEC conglomerate in 1968. Elliott Automation retained the real-time computing systems, the Elliott 900 series computers, and set about designing a new range of computer systems. The rules of the reorganisation did not allow Elliott Automation to continue working on data processing computing products for some years after the split (and similarly, prevented ICT/ICL working on real-time computing products). Three new computer ranges were identified, known internally as Alpha, Beta, and Gamma. Alpha became the
GEC 2050 The GEC 2050 was an 8-bit minicomputer produced during the 1970s, initially by Marconi Elliott Computer Systems of the UK, before the company renamed itself GEC Computers Limited. The first models were labeled MECS 2050, before being renamed ...
8-bit minicomputer, and beta became the GEC 4080 16-bit minicomputer with its unique Nucleus feature. Gamma was never developed, so a few of its enhanced features were consequently pulled back into the GEC 4080. The company's main product was the GEC 4000 series minicomputers, which were used by many other GEC and Marconi companies as the basis for real-time control systems in industrial and military applications. Development of new computers in the series continued through most of the life of the company. Other products manufactured in the earlier years were the GEC 2050, computer power supplies, and high resolution
military computer This article specifically addresses U.S. armed forces military computers and their use. History Some of the earliest computers were military computers. Military requirements for portability and ruggedness led to some of the earliest transistori ...
displays, as well as the Elliott 900 series for existing Elliot customers. GEC Computers also found that some of the software applications it developed for its own use were saleable to other companies, such as its salary payment services, its multi-layer
printed circuit board A printed circuit board (PCB; also printed wiring board or PWB) is a medium used in Electrical engineering, electrical and electronic engineering to connect electronic components to one another in a controlled manner. It takes the form of a L ...
design software, and its project management software. In the mid-1970s, GEC Computers was working on
OS4000 OS4000 is a proprietary operating system introduced by GEC Computers Limited in 1977 as the successor to GEC DOS, for its range of GEC 4000 series 16-bit, and later 32-bit, minicomputers. OS4000 was developed through to late 1990s, and has bee ...
, a more advanced operating system for the GEC 4000 series. This opened up the 4000 series to more customers, including the academic and research communities. A number of collaborative projects were undertaken, some of which resulted in applications which GEC Computers developed further and sold, in addition to the sales of the computers themselves. One of the largest of these were X.25 packet switch systems, which resulted from a research collaboration with NERC. In the late 1970s, Post Office Telecommunications developed Prestel on the GEC 4000 series, and this resulted in sales for similar applications all over the world. In 1979, the company was awarded the Queen's Award for Technical Achievement for the development of the 4000 series, particularly Nucleus. By 1980, OS4000 was becoming popular in UK academic and research organisations as a multi-user system, with installations at
Rutherford-Appleton Laboratory The Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) is one of the national scientific research laboratories in the UK operated by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC). It began as the Rutherford High Energy Laboratory, merged with the Atlas ...
, Daresbury Laboratory,
Harwell Laboratory The Atomic Energy Research Establishment (AERE) was the main centre for atomic energy research and development in the United Kingdom from 1946 to the 1990s. It was created, owned and funded by the British Government. A number of early rese ...
, NERC,
Met Office The Meteorological Office, abbreviated as the Met Office, is the United Kingdom's national weather service. It is an executive agency and trading fund of the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and is led by CEO Penelope E ...
,
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, in many university physics and/or engineering departments, and as the main central computer service at University College London (Euclid) and Keele University. To cater for this market, in the early 1980s the company partnered with American company
A. B. Dick The A. B. Dick Company (later stylized as ABDick) was a major American manufacturer of copy machines and office supplies in the late 19th century and 20th centuries. Founding and growth The company was founded in 1883 in Chicago as a lumber compa ...
to develop the
GEC Series 63 The GEC Series 63 was a 32-bit minicomputer produced by GEC Computers Limited of the UK during the 1980s in conjunction with A.B. Dick in USA. During development, the computer was known as the R Project. The hardware development (under Dick ...
, which could run OS6000 (based on OS4000) or UNIX System III, and later UNIX System V; however, sales were disappointing and the 63 series was discontinued in 1987. The numbers of GEC computer systems around the UK by now meant that GEC Computers had built up a widespread field service organisation, and could guarantee on-site response within hours across pretty much the whole country. This turned out to be a valuable asset. Many new technology companies trying to enter the market struggled when required to provide this type of service, and GEC Computers started taking on third-party field service support for many other companies, including some which competed with GEC Computers' own products. (Some of these operations survived in Telent following the 2005 demise of GEC.) Throughout the 1980s, GEC Computers expanded from its Borehamwood offices into three large purpose-built factory units in the Woodside Estate, Dunstable. The company closed these as the business contracted in the 1990s. GEC Computers' extensive presence in UK academic and research organisations, and its field service organisation, led
Sun Microsystems Sun Microsystems, Inc. (Sun for short) was an American technology company that sold computers, computer components, software, and information technology services and created the Java programming language, the Solaris operating system, ZFS, the ...
to choose GEC Computers to be its presence in the UK for the launch of its Sun-2 product range in the early 1980s, which GEC Computers sold under the name of GEC Series 42. GEC Computers developed some reduced cost workstations called the GEC Series 21, based on Atari 520ST and 1040ST systems with replaced PROM operating system code. GEC Computers was not particularly successful at selling the Sun systems, and Sun opened UK offices to sell direct, although GEC Computers' field service continued to support Sun Microsystems across the UK for many years, until Sun built up its own field service organisation. At the company's peak in the early 1980s there were about 1,600 employees, mainly based in the original Elliott building at Borehamwood, and at Dunstable. There were a number of small offices in many other countries too. By the 1990s, the real-time process control market was moving to cheaper microprocessor-based systems, and GEC 4000 series sales into that market dried up. X.25 networks were being replaced by Internet networks, and so X.25 packet switch sales dwindled too. This left just the Videotex sales to other countries, and so the company concentrated on this product. However, there was only a window of a few years before the World Wide Web displaced Videotex systems, and the last of the company's main markets ended. From the mid-1990s, manufacture of systems ceased, although maintenance of installed systems and third-party maintenance continues today (2019).


Company name

The company had many names throughout its lifetime, although GEC Computers is probably the best known in connection with the company's main products of the 1970s and 1980s. The sequence of company names was: * Elliott Automation * Marconi Elliott Computer Systems * GEC Computers Limited * GPT Computers Limited * GPT Data Systems * GPT Video and Data Systems after which the remains of the company folded into Marconi Communications, and subsequently into Telent. GEC Computers was granted permission by GEC to not use the usual GEC logo on its products, as the logo was seen as rather old-fashioned (even in the early 1970s) for the new branding for the company.


Products and services

* Inherited the
Marconi Transistorised Automatic Computer (T.A.C.) The Marconi Transistorized Automatic Computer was the first all-transistor computer built by Britain's Marconi Company. It was designed and manufactured from around 1959. The computer employed germanium transistors which by this time were suffic ...
, employed in nuclear power stations for data presentation * Inherited the
Marconi Myriad The Marconi Myriad was an early computer designed by the Marconi Company in the 1960s. Myriad was a 24-bit machine largely built using integrated circuits from Ferranti which were packaged in small "TO-5" type cans. The architecture was "convent ...
, but probably only maintained existing ones * Inherited English Electric M2100, but probably only maintained existing ones * Elliott 900 series *
GEC 2050 The GEC 2050 was an 8-bit minicomputer produced during the 1970s, initially by Marconi Elliott Computer Systems of the UK, before the company renamed itself GEC Computers Limited. The first models were labeled MECS 2050, before being renamed ...
* GEC 4000 series, and operating systems COS, DOS,
OS4000 OS4000 is a proprietary operating system introduced by GEC Computers Limited in 1977 as the successor to GEC DOS, for its range of GEC 4000 series 16-bit, and later 32-bit, minicomputers. OS4000 was developed through to late 1990s, and has bee ...
, SCP-2 * GEC Series 21 * GEC Series 42 ( Sun-2 and Sun-3) *
GEC Series 63 The GEC Series 63 was a 32-bit minicomputer produced by GEC Computers Limited of the UK during the 1980s in conjunction with A.B. Dick in USA. During development, the computer was known as the R Project. The hardware development (under Dick ...
* Early switched-mode power supply OEM * Early high-resolution colour visual display units (mainly for military use) * Computing consulting services (mainly to other GEC companies) * Third-party maintenance * X.25 packet switches * Public Videotex and private Viewdata systems * Third-party electronic and cable assemblies manufacture


References


GEC 4000 family, ''Which Computer?'', May 1979
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gec Computers Minicomputers Defunct computer hardware companies Engineering companies of the United Kingdom Former defence companies of the United Kingdom General Electric Company Defunct computer companies of the United Kingdom