The First Computer BugIn 1945, Naval officer and mathematician Grace Murray Hopper was working on the Harvard University Mark II Aiken Relay Calculator (a primitive computer) which was in service at the Naval Weapons Center in Dahlgren, Virginia.
On the 9th of September, 1945, when the machine was experiencing problems, an investigation showed that there was a moth which flew into one of the relays and jammed it.
The offending moth was taped into the log book alongside the official report, which stated: "First actual case of a bug being found."
The moth been taped onto the logbook. Click the picture to see a larger version.The word went out that they had "debugged" the machine and the term "debugging a computer program" was born.
It has now become a popular tradition that it was the legendary American Naval officer and mathematician Grace Murray Hopper who found the offending insect, but it's also said that she wasn't there when it happened.
Grace Murray Hopper orking on a early computerGrace was a pioneer in data processing and is credited with developing the first compiler, which is a program that translates a high-level human-readable language into the machine language understood by the computer. In 1983, Grace became the first woman to achieve the rank of rear admiral in the United States Navy.
The logbook, with the moth still taped by the entry, is on display in the History of American Technology Museum.