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- VIEW POINTS, Page 69TELEVISIONMachines That Think
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- When CBS hired a newly minted Univac to analyze the vote in
- the 1952 presidential election, network officials thought it a
- nifty publicity stunt. But when the printout appeared, an
- embarrassed Charles Collingwood reported that the machine couldn't
- make up its mind. It was not until after midnight that CBS
- confessed the truth: Univac had correctly predicted Dwight
- Eisenhower would swamp Adlai Stevenson in one of the biggest
- landslides in history, but nobody believed it. It is a defining
- moment in THE MACHINE THAT CHANGED THE WORLD, a surprisingly
- satisfying five-part history of the computer that starts April 6
- on PBS. Crafted from old footage and fresh reportage by a team of
- veteran Nova and BBC hands, it is less a chronicle of hardware
- than a loving exploration of the sometimes rocky relationship
- between the first mindlike machines and the people who created
- them. Heady data for a generation that tends to take its Macs
- and PCs for granted.
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- By Philip Elmer-De Witt.
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