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Home > 50 Years of IT > Trailblazers

The First Computer Comes To India...
Saturday, December 30, 2006

Professor and head of the Electronics and Communications Unit of ISI, the Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta, Dr Dwijish Dutta Majumdar, smiled weakly as we shook hands. At 53 he was bespectacled, hair brushed back, slightly heavy in the middle which you notice only when he stands up. There were at least 40 kgs of paper on the table, much of which had strong bearing on fields as diverse as image processing to pattern recognition and artificial intelligence to multi valued logic of fuzzy mathematics.

Dr Majumdar or DDM, is an institution within an institution. In the next three hours, he took us on a conducted tour of what should be a compulsory subject in initiating every computer professional in India.

No. It was not just the first 'computer for India to be brought here in 1995, it was the first in Asia, outside Japan. DDM lights up a Wills Navy Cut cigarette and adds that ISI had the distinction of developing the first Indian analog computer as well. Nehru came to meet the computer that solved a 10 x 10 single precision matrix in 90 minutes. It was built with military disposal.

Dwijish Dutta, MM Mukherjee and Amaresh Roy: The men behind India's first ever computer

The first of the two digital computers in India was also installed here. Towards the end of 1955, came the HEC-2M, a giant piece of equipment that set sail from England in two crates. Nobody knows how much it weighted but, yes, it took about two months for ISI people to install the 1K memory, tube-based system. It was not the days of manufacture by hundreds and thousands. This was specially crafted and designed by Professor AD Booth at Birk Bak College in the UK.

Two young people were sent by Prof Mahalanobis to get trained by Prof Booth himself in installing and managing the equipment.

One was Prof MM Mukherjee and the other was Amaresh Roy. Could I meet them, I enquired, breaking DDM's nostalgia. He stopped for a moment. Looked out of the grey December window. No, Mr Roy is no more and Prof Mukherjee has left the country and now lives with his son in the USA.

The HEC-2M was a 16-bit machine. With 16 instructions. It operated in machine code with its drum memory of 1024 words. Some of the double precision was there with 32 bits registers. It did not have a printer or a tape. It used punched cards and gave out punched cards, till ISI fixed a printer. Was it part of a grant? DDM recollects, "It was purchased. I think it was around Rs 2 lakh and you know what Rs 2 lakh was in 1955!"

Housed in an air-conditioned space of about 300 square feet, the HEC-2M 'worked'. Scientific problems poured in from all parts of the country, including a lot of work from the Defense, mostly for trajectory analysis for artillery cannons. DDM remembers lovingly, "It most became the National Computational Center of India."

In 1958, with a grant from the UNTAB (United Nations Technical Assistance Board), ISI got a computer named after the mountain range of the country of its origin–URAL. It came from Russia with a few things over the HEC-2M. Also, unlike HEC-2M, it was accompanied by a team of Russian engineers.

HEC-24, posing with the late Professor Amaresh Roy....

It had a 32-bit word size, a horizontal magtape, a punched celluloid tape, 2 Kb of memory and a printer that made "ridiculous sounds".

At this point Ashok Dasgupta joined in. Now 52, he is one of the few who can offer a firsthand account of the feelings of the '50s. Dasgupta was connected with both HEC-2M and URAL from "opening the packing box" that came by ship.

Yes, there was a formal celebration but he cannot recall the details. How was it to be associated with India's first computer in 1955? Dasgupta took a puff of his Regent Regular and informed us that his family took immense pride that he was associated with the only computer of the country.

Today, Biswanath Das is graying. In 1956, he was a peon in the ISI Computer Group. Thirty years after, he is still with DDM, now in the Electronics and Communication Sciences Unit. Das peered through his lenses and suddenly his unshaven face lit up in ecstacy. "Oh, you are talking about URAL and HEC-2M? Yes, I was there and we worked late nights for them. We were very happy with their arrival, and particularly with that of HEC-2M." For Das and for many others, it was not 'the' URAL or , 'the' HEC-2M. In recollection, they are almost like family pets who were around for such a long time. Both were used well till 1964 when IBM installed the 1401 here. And with that event, India's first two computers were given a rest.

Could one go and see them, I enquired. For a moment all three people became disturbingly quiet. They were dismantled and thrown irretrievably in some godowns long back, I was told. Today it may not be possible to rearrange them beyond bits and pieces.

ISI has never thought of keeping any memento around it, like possibly the first card punched by it. "I had thought of making a museum to preserve them but it could not happen. If someone comes, I am willing to trace them from wherever they are and give the remains from preservation," a pensive DDM remarks. Ingratitude to history ins firm-wired in the basic fibres of the nation,
but possibly readers will come forward to help.

Before going to the archives to trace a few photographs, I decided to give the search a try. Winding through damp corridors we landed up in a long tin-roofed godown which partly is a workshop and partly a junkyard. Covered under heaps of cobwebs and dust accumulated over years of neglect, lay buried metal remains of many discoveries, prototypes and tools used in basic research. I had almost given up the search when a jubilant DDM shouted with joy–"Look, there is HEC-2M". I could not even go to a foot away from it in the pile of scrap, with cobwebs hanging like tentacles of death. From where I stood, the 6 x 4 HEC-2M looked like an oversized PABX panel with the switches, instructions and a voltage meter still clearly visible. God forbid, if DDM is not around for some reason, nobody will ever know where it all began-because India's first computer will not be identifiable by the scientists of today.

HEC-2M-Once Premiers and Heads of States used to come and see it. Today it is resting desolately it heaps of allied scrap–like one more skeleton in a technological graveyard.

Subroto Bagchi
Dataquest, January 1985
Page: 46-47

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