Control Data Corporation

Control Data Corporation
IndustrySupercomputing
Founded1957 (1957)
FateBroken up
SuccessorCeridian (now Dayforce, Inc.)
Headquarters,
U.S.
Key people
Seymour Cray,
William Norris

Control Data Corporation (CDC) was a mainframe and supercomputer company that in the 1960s was one of the nine major U.S. computer companies, which group included IBM, the Burroughs Corporation, and the Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), the NCR Corporation (NCR), General Electric, and Honeywell, RCA and UNIVAC. For most of the 1960s, the strength of CDC was the work of the electrical engineer Seymour Cray who developed a series of fast computers, then considered the fastest computing machines in the world; in the 1970s, Cray left the Control Data Corporation and founded Cray Research (CRI) to design and make supercomputers. In 1988, after much financial loss, the Control Data Corporation began withdrawing from making computers and sold the affiliated companies of CDC; in 1992, Cray established Control Data Systems, Inc. The remaining affiliate companies of CDC currently do business as the software company Ceridian.[1][2]

  1. ^ "Ceridian, Form PRE 14A, Filing Date Mar 4, 1994". secdatabase.com. Retrieved Mar 28, 2013.
  2. ^ "Ceridian, Form 10-K, Annual Report, Filing Date Mar 10, 1994". secdatabase.com. Retrieved Mar 28, 2013.

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