On June 16, 1911, Computing Tabulating Recording was founded in the United States, including the Computing Scale Company of America, the Tabulating Machine Company and the International Time Recording Company, and since 1914 it is known as the International Business Machines or, for short, IBM.
Without exaggeration, we can say that IBM has greatly influenced the world in which we live today. Judge for yourself: hard drives, Fortran, DRAM, floppy disks, SQL (and the relational database concept in general), barcodes - all this appeared within the walls of IBM. In addition, IBM employees discovered high-temperature superconductivity and invented a scanning tunneling microscope, for which, in 1987 and 1986, respectively, Nobel Prizes in Physics were received. Benoit Mandelbrot wrote his famous article on fractals for the journal Science also being an IBM employee. ')
Deep Blue, finally - another important step in the development of computer technology.
Good company, what to say. We wish her continued success and prosperity.