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  • This is the largest computer company in the world, and it's known as 'Big Blue.'

  • Welcome to WatchMojo.com,

  • and today we'll be learning more about the history of IBM.

  • Before changing its name to IBM,

  • the Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation was incorporated on June 16th, 1911.

  • CTR's products were quite varied, but they all increased business efficiency.

  • Just a few years after that company was officially formed,

  • Thomas J. Watson, Sr. became president,

  • and within four years he doubled the company's profits.

  • Watson's appointment also resulted in a shift in policies at the company.

  • In fact, IBM is credited with a number of changes that have indelibly influenced the American workforce.

  • It was among the first companies to hire disabled workers,

  • and it created an employee training program early on.

  • IBM also instituted the 40-hour work week,

  • and introduced group life insurance to its workers.

  • It was also early in its acceptance of equal opportunity employment.

  • Eventually, on February 14th, 1924,

  • CTR's name was officially changed to International Business Machines Corporation, or IBM.

  • In the company's early days, it achieved success for perfecting punched card technology,

  • as well as a number of other innovations.

  • IBM and Watson remained bullish throughout the Great Depression.

  • In 1935, that gamble paid off when the company was awarded what was called

  • the biggest accounting operation of all time by the U.S. government

  • when it passed the Social Security Act.

  • IBM was then put in charge of tracking employment records for 26 million American workers.

  • The company expanded significantly through the 1940s,

  • and during that period made strides to enter the large-scale computing industry.

  • IBM began the 1950s strong, and during that decade they began producing

  • some of the world's most popular business and scientific computers.

  • For example, in 1952 the IBM 701 business computer was introduced to the public.

  • By 1956, they had also revolutionized data storage by launching the world's first magnetic hard disc.

  • This machine was the size of two refrigerators, and cost roughly ten thousand dollars per megabyte.

  • Amid these great strides, the company lost one of its founding fathers:

  • Thomas J. Watson, Sr. passed away on June 19th, 1956.

  • Control of the company was then passed to his son, Thomas J. Watson, Jr.

  • Moving into the '60s, IBM introduced its award-winning Selectric line of typewriters,

  • and this model went on to dominate the American typewriter market.

  • Just three years later, in 1964 the Selectric typewriter became a pioneer

  • in word processing by allowing typists to revise stored text.

  • The company transformed the industry again that year by announcing the IBM System/360.

  • This family of computers was the first modern mainframe computer system.

  • By the end of the decade,

  • IBM had also proved itself an important ally of NASA and the space program,

  • and was instrumental in putting a man on the moon.

  • IBM also began changing the face of retail.

  • In 1969, they introduced the magnetic strips found on credit cards

  • and within two years, this became the standard across the world.

  • They further influenced retail by perfecting the technology that allowed stores to read UPC codes.

  • IBM introduced a magnetic storage system called the floppy disc in 1971.

  • Ten years later the company announced the IBM Personal Computer,

  • and this caused another revolution in the business world.

  • In fact, in 1982 Time magazine named the personal computer the 'Person of the Year.'

  • IBM went through some tough times through the late '80s and into the '90s

  • due to changing trends in business computing.

  • However, one positive event during this period was the invention of Deep Blue.

  • This supercomputer defeated the world champion chess player,

  • and foreshadowed another triumph for the company.

  • In 2011, another IBM supercomputer competed on the trivia-game show Jeopardy!

  • against two human champions.

  • The appropriately named Watson computer was able to process questions asked in natural language,

  • and used its huge database of knowledge to win the game.

  • Following this impressive showing, experiments placed Watson in a medical environment

  • with the potential to answer doctors' questions about medicines, diseases and diagnoses.

  • IBM continues to advance the computer industry,

  • and will surely contribute a number of valuable discoveries over its next hundred years.

  • Subtitles by the Amara.org community

This is the largest computer company in the world, and it's known as 'Big Blue.'

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