IBM Research
IBM Research is IBM's research and development division. It is the largest industrial research organization in the world, with twelve labs on six continents.[1]
IBM employees have garnered six Nobel Prizes, six Turing Awards, 20 inductees into the U.S. National Inventors Hall of Fame, 19 National Medals of Technology, five National Medals of Science and three Kavli Prizes.[2]
As of 2018, the company has generated more patents than any other business in each of 25 consecutive years, which is a record.[3]
Contents
History[edit]
The roots of today's IBM Research began with the 1945 opening of the Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory at Columbia University.[4] This was the first IBM laboratory devoted to pure science and later expanded into additional IBM Research locations in Westchester County, New York starting in the 1950s,[5][6] including the Thomas J. Watson Research Center in 1961.[5][6]
Advances[edit]
Notable company inventions include the floppy disk, the hard disk drive, the magnetic stripe card, the relational database, the Universal Product Code (UPC), the financial swap, the Fortran programming language, SABRE airline reservation system, DRAM, copper wiring in semiconductors, the smartphone, the portable computer, the Automated Teller Machine (ATM), the silicon-on-insulator (SOI) semiconductor manufacturing process, Watson artificial intelligence[7] and the Quantum Experience.
Advances in nanotechnology include IBM in atoms, where a scanning tunneling microscope was used to arrange 35 individual xenon atoms on a substrate of chilled crystal of nickel to spell out the three letter company acronym. It was the first time atoms had been precisely positioned on a flat surface.[8]
Applications[edit]
Major undertakings at IBM Research have included the invention of innovative materials and structures, high-performance microprocessors and computers, analytical methods and tools, algorithms, software architectures, methods for managing, searching and deriving meaning from data and in turning IBM's advanced services methodologies into reusable assets.
IBM Research's numerous contributions to physical and computer sciences include the Scanning Tunneling Microscope and high temperature superconductivity, both of which were awarded the Nobel Prize. IBM Research was behind the inventions of the SABRE travel reservation system, the technology of laser eye surgery, magnetic storage, the relational database, UPC barcodes and Watson, the question-answering computing system that won a match against human champions on the Jeopardy! television quiz show. The Watson technology is now being commercialized as part of a project with healthcare company Anthem Inc..
Notable IBM Research computer scientists[edit]
There are a number of computer scientists "who made IBM Research famous."[9] These include Frances E. Allen,[10] Marc Auslander, John Backus,[11][12][13][14][15][16] Charles H. Bennett (computer scientist), Erich Bloch,[17] Grady Booch, [18][19] [20] [21][22] Fred Brooks (known for his book The Mythical Man-Month),[23][24][25][26] Peter Brown,[27] Larry Carter,[28][29] Gregory Chaitin, John Cocke, Alan Cobham,[30] Edgar F. Codd, Don Coppersmith, Ronald Fagin, Horst Feistel, Jeanne Ferrante, Zvi Galil, Ralph E. Gomory, Jim Gray, Joseph Halpern, Kenneth E. Iverson, Frederick Jelinek, Reynold B. Johnson, Benoit Mandelbrot, Robert Mercer (businessman), C. Mohan, Michael O. Rabin, Arthur Samuel, Alfred Spector, Moshe Vardi, John Vlissides, Mark N. Wegman and Shmuel Winograd.
Other notable developments[edit]
- Data Encryption Standard (DES)
- Fast Fourier Transform (FFT)
- Benoît B. Mandelbrot's introduction of Fractals
- Magnetic disk storage (hard disks)
- MELD-Plus risk score.
- One-transistor dynamic random-access memory (DRAM)
- Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC) architecture
- Relational databases
- Deep Blue, a grandmaster-level chess-playing computer
Laboratories[edit]
Name | Location | Founded |
---|---|---|
IBM Research – Africa | Nairobi, Kenya | 2013 |
Johannesburg, South Africa | 2015 | |
IBM Research – Almaden | Almaden Valley, San Jose, California | 1986 |
IBM Research – Austin | Austin, Texas | 1995 |
IBM Research – Australia | Melbourne, Australia | 2011 |
IBM Research – Brazil | São Paulo, Brazil | 2010 |
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 2010 | |
IBM Research – China | Beijing, China | 1995 |
Shanghai, China | 2008 | |
IBM Research – Haifa | Haifa, Israel | 1972 |
IBM Research – India | Delhi, India | 1998 |
Bangalore, India | 1998 | |
IBM Research – Ireland | Damastown, Ireland | 2011 |
IBM Research – Thomas J. Watson Research Center | Yorktown Heights, New York | 1945 |
Albany, New York | 2001 | |
IBM Research – Tokyo | Tokyo, Japan | 1982 |
IBM Research – Zurich | Rüschlikon, Switzerland | 1956 |
Historic research centers[edit]
- IBM La Gaude, near Nice, France
- Cambridge Scientific Center
- IBM New York Scientific Center
- 330 North Wabash in Chicago
- IBM Laboratory Vienna[31]
Publications[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ "Labs and locations". IBM Research. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
- ^ "Awards & Achievements". IBM. Retrieved 2012-05-23.
- ^ "IBM Breaks Records to Top U.S. Patent List for 25th Consecutive Year". IBM (Press release). 9 January 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
- ^ "IBM Watson Laboratory at Columbia University". Columbia.edu. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
- ^ a b Beatty, Jack, (editor) Colussus: how the corporation changed America, New York : Random House, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7679-0352-3. Cf. chapter "Making the 'R' Yield 'D': The IBM Labs" by Robert Buderi.
- ^ a b IBM, "Watson Research Center: Watson Facility History"
- ^ "History of progress". IBM Research. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
- ^ Browne, Malcolm W. (April 5, 1990). "2 Researchers Spell 'I.B.M.,' Atom by Atom". New York Times. Archived from the original on 2009-08-03.
- ^ "Computer scientists who made IBM Research famous", IBM, 17 December 2012, retrieved 16 January 2016
- ^ Biography and oral history
- ^ IBM Archives
- ^ Stanford Archives
- ^ NNDB profile
- ^ Columbia University page
- ^ New York Times obituary
- ^ John Backus Memorial
- ^ IBM Archives
- ^ Researcher personal page
- ^ My developer Works blog Archived 2015-12-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Handbook of software architecture
- ^ IEEE Software: On Architecture
- ^ The Promise, The Limits, The Beauty of Software Archived 2011-03-28 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Master Planner: Fred Brooks Shows How to Design Anything
- ^ NNDB profile
- ^ Innovator: Fred Brooks
- ^ The Grill: Fred Brooks (Computerworld)
- ^ Business Insider (thumbnail)
- ^ University of California, San Diego
- ^ SIAM short course
- ^ Recursivity (Blogspot)
- ^ IBM Corporation. "Some key dates in IBM's operations in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA)" (PDF). IBM History. Retrieved July 24, 2016.
Further reading[edit]
- Brennan, Jean Ford (1971). The IBM Watson Laboratory at Columbia University: A History. IBM.
External links[edit]
- IBM Research Official Website
- Projects
- Research History Highlights (Top Innovations)
- Research history by year
- Oral history interview with Martin Schwarzschild head of Watson Scientific Computation Laboratory at Columbia University, Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota
- IBM Research's technical journals