Well, I'm going to assume there was no actual "computer" on board...
However, a sharply focused image has more high-frequency components than a poorly focused one, so some sort of frequency discriminator (a technology from the 1920's IIRC) could possibly suffice to check and adjust focus. Remember that we've had sophisticated servomechanisms since WW2 so the feedback theory to do this was already well known.
However, a sharply focused image has more high-frequency components than a poorly focused one, so some sort of frequency discriminator (a technology from the 1920's IIRC) could possibly suffice to check and adjust focus. Remember that we've had sophisticated servomechanisms since WW2 so the feedback theory to do this was already well known.
But that's just a guess...