SMIL ( Swedish : Siffermaskinen i Lund , "The Number Machine in Lund") was a first-generation computer built at Lund University in Lund , Sweden . SMIL was based on the IAS architecture developed by John von Neumann .
5-404: SMIL or Smil may refer to: SMIL (computer) , a Swedish first-generation computer Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language , a www-standard markup language for multimedia presentations, including playlists and animated SVGs Vaclav Smil (born 1943), Czech-Canadian scientist and policy analyst smil.mil , an access to SIPRNet Izmail ,
10-496: A leading role in the creation of SMIL, which was the first computer developed in Lund and among the first in Sweden. SMIL was introduced in 1956 and then was in operation until 1970. In February 1962 SMIL was fitted with a compiler for ALGOL 60 . The compiler was constructed by Torgil Ekman and Leif Robertson. Carl-Erik Fröberg was also behind the early emergence of numerical analysis as
15-414: A separate university subject. In this context, he wrote himself and collaborated with others on several textbooks in computer education, for example, Textbook on Numerical Analysis (1962) and Textbook of Algol (1964). These books were widely distributed and translated into several languages. Parts of SMIL are exhibited at Malmö Technical Museum. On January 4, 2006, an emulator of SMIL named SMILemu
20-733: A town in Ukraine sometimes known in Romanian as Smil Smil, or Samael , an archangel See also [ edit ] Smile (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title SMIL . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=SMIL&oldid=1209172498 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Romanian-language text Short description
25-542: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages SMIL (computer) Carl-Erik Fröberg belonged to the group of five young Swedish scientists 1947–48 that IVA sent to the U.S. to gather information about the early computer development, and then came to strongly influence the development in Sweden. Fröberg visited with Erik Stemme the Institute for Advanced Study , and John von Neumann's research group. Back in Lund, he played
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