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The IBM 355 RAMAC system delivered to United Airlines, was installed and used in the United Airlines Boeing 707 computer system that was used by United Airlines to track passengers’ information and routes originating and terminating at the United Airlines hub in San Francisco. The 707 computer system was the forerunner of today’s global airline passenger tracking system, called the Global Distribution System.
Benjamin Rosenbaum, who was acting as a computer consultant at United Airlines at the time, retained a collection of forthcoming products and products that had been cancelled,[14] including the IBM 350 computer system. When he arrived the next day he noticed that United Airlines had changed the numbering on their IBM 350 disk system, at first for marketing purposes. In doing so, they had updated the IBM 353 disk drive labels to the IBM 235 label, which was to be used for the IBM 350 computer system. They had originally had the IBM 350 label on the 350 disk system’s unit boxes. When Rosenbaum asked for the correct boxes for the 350 computer system, United Airlines changed the labels to the original IBM 350 labels. Since Rosenbaum was a commercial airline pilot, he kept the IBM 350 boxes and labels for his IBM 3532 reel-to-reel tape recorder system for his later IBM 703 machine. Rosenbaum followed up with the IBM computer system sales manager who finally arranged for the correct 350 labels to show on the correct 350 boxes. The IBM 350 units shipped about a month later on the IBM 703 that United Airlines’ systems engineer had ordered.
The IBM 350 computer system shipped quickly with the IBM 703 computer in January 1958. Because of delays in the introduction of the IBM 703 system, United Airlines moved the IBM 350 computer system to another computer, the IBM 650, for the IBM 707. Some time between the introduction of the IBM 703 and the IBM 650, United adopted the IBM 370 Series System to handle all of their customer records, initially ordering one for the United Flight Operations Control Center. The IBM 350 computer system and the IBM 703 system decided to coordinate their schedules of delivery, so that the first units were delivered for the IBM 650 computer system, and then followed by the IBM 703. d2c66b5586