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John Shepherd-Barron

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John Adrian Shepherd-Barron (born 1925 Tain, Ross, Scotland) is a Scottish inventor. Educated at the University of Edinburgh and University of Cambridge, Shepherd-Barron went on to work for De La Rue Instruments in the 1960s and came up with the concept of a self-service machine which would dispense paper currency with 24/7 availability. This was the Automated Teller Machine (ATM).[1] The first machine was established outside an Enfield, north London, branch of Barclays Bank in 1967,[1] when he was Managing Director of De La Rue Instruments: there are now more than a million installed world-wide. He received the OBE in the 2005 New Year's Honours list for services to banking as "inventor of the automatic cash dispenser". There is still some controversy over the invention: the first ATM ever was not his creation. This was developed by Luther George Simjian and installed in 1939 at the City Bank of New York. However, it was removed from the bank the same year it was installed due to lack of customer demand (it was a 6 month trial at the end of which the City Bank of New York decided not to keep the machine). Shepherd-Barron's version of this (the idea for which he had in the bath)[2], which was created in the late 1960s, is what was built upon and evolved until it reached the state at which it is currently. The Shepherd-Barron dispenser actually predated the introduction of the plastic card with its magnetic strip: the machines used special cheques which had been impregnated with a radioactive compound of carbon-14, which was detected and matched against the personal identification number (PIN) entered on a keypad. A proposed PIN length of 6 digits was rejected and 4 digits chosen instead, because it was the longest string of numbers that his wife could remember.[1] His son, Nicholas Shepherd-Barron FRS, is professor of mathematics at the University of Cambridge. As well as the ATM, he has also invented some less successful devices, such as one that plays the sound of a killer whale to deter seals from salmon farms.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Brian Milligan, The man who invented the cash machine, BBC News Online, 25 June 2007
  2. ^ Interview with Shepherd-Barron, You and Yours BBC Radio 4 programme 25 June 2007

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John Shepherd-Barron from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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