0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views27 pages

Computer History1

The document discusses the history of computing from ancient counting aids like the abacus to modern computers. It describes important early computers like the ENIAC and key innovations like the transistor. The development of personal computers by IBM and Apple is also summarized.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views27 pages

Computer History1

The document discusses the history of computing from ancient counting aids like the abacus to modern computers. It describes important early computers like the ENIAC and key innovations like the transistor. The development of personal computers by IBM and Apple is also summarized.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 27

© J Wagner March 20, 200

ABACUS
4th Century B.C.

The abacus, a simple counting aid, may


have been invented in Babylonia (now Iraq)
in the fourth century B.C.
This device allows users to make
computations using a system of sliding
beads arranged on a rack.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


CHARLES BABBAGE
(1791 - 1871)

 Born in 1791, Charles Babbage was an


English mathematician and professor.
 In 1822, he persuaded the British
government to finance his design to build a
machine that would calculate tables for
logarithms.
With Charles Babbage's creation of the
"Analytical Engine", (1833) computers took
the form of a general purpose machine.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


ENIAC
1946

 Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer


Under the leadership of J. Presper Eckert
(1919 - 1995) and John W. Mauchly (1907 -
1980) the team produced a machine that computed
at speeds 1,000 times faster than the Mark I was
capable of only 2 years earlier.
Using 18,00-19,000 vacuum tubes, 70,000
resistors and 5 million soldered joints this massive
instrument required the output of a small power
station to operate it.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


ENIAC
1946

 It could do nuclear physics


calculations (in two hours) which it
would have taken 100 engineers a year
to do by hand.
The system's program could be
changed by rewiring a panel.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


ENIAC
1946

© J Wagner March 20, 200


TRANSISTOR
1948

 In the laboratories of Bell Telephone, John


Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley
discovered the "transfer resistor"; later labelled
the transistor.
Advantages:
increased reliability
1/13 size of vacuum tubes
consumed 1/20 of the electricity of
vacuum tubes
were a fraction of the cost

© J Wagner March 20, 200


TRANSISTOR
1948
 This tiny device had a huge impact on and
extensive implications for modern computers. In
1956, the transistor won its creators the
Noble Peace Prize for their invention.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


ALTAIR
1975
 The invention of the transistor made
computers smaller, cheaper and more reliable.
Therefore, the stage was set for the
entrance of the computer into the domestic
realm. In 1975, the age of personal
computers commenced.
Under the leadership of Ed Roberts the
Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Company
(MITS) wanted to design a computer 'kit' for
the home hobbyist.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


ALTAIR
1975
 Based on the Intel 8080 processor,
capable of controlling 64 kilobyes of memory,
the MITS Altair - as the invention was later
called - was debuted on the cover of the
January edition of Popular Electronics
magazine.
Presenting the Altair as an unassembled kit
kept costs to a minimum. Therefore, the
company was able to offer this model for only
$395. Supply could not keep up with demand.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


ALTAIR
1975
 ALTAIR FACTS:
No Keyboard
No Video Display
No Storage Device

© J Wagner March 20, 200


IBM (PC)
1981

 On August 12, 1981 IBM announced its


own personal computer.
Using the 16 bit Intel 8088
microprocessor, allowed for increased speed
and huge amounts of memory.
Unlike the Altair that was sold as
unassembled computer kits, IBM sold its
"ready-made" machine through retailers and
by qualified salespeople.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


IBM (PC)
1981

 To satisfy consumer appetites and


to increase usability, IBM gave
prototype IBM PCs to a number of
major software companies.
For the first time, small companies
and individuals who never would have
imagined owning a "personal" computer
were now opened to the computer
world.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


MACINTOSH
(1984)

 IBM's major competitor was a company


lead by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs; the
Apple Computer Inc.
The "Lisa" was the result of their
competitive thrust.
This system differed from its predecessors
in its use of a "mouse" - then a quite foreign
computer instrument - in lieu of manually
typing commands.
However, the outrageous price of the Lisa
kept it out of reach for many computer
buyers.
© J Wagner March 20, 200
MACINTOSH
(1984)

 Apple's brainchild was the


Macintosh. Like the Lisa, the
Macintosh too would make use of a
graphical user interface.
Introduced in January 1984 it was
an immediate success.
The GUI (Graphical User Interface)
made the system easy to use.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


MACINTOSH
(1984)

 The Apple Macintosh debuts in 1984. It


features a simple, graphical interface, uses
the 8-MHz, 32-bit Motorola 68000 CPU, and
has a built-in 9-inch B/W screen.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


© J Wagner March 20, 200
FIRST GENERATION
(1945-1956)

 First generation computers were characterized by


the fact that operating instructions were made-to-
order for the specific task for which the computer was
to be used. Each computer had a different binary-
coded program called a machine language that told it
how to operate. This made the computer difficult to
program and limited its versatility and speed. Other
distinctive features of first generation computers were
the use of vacuum tubes (responsible for their
breathtaking size) and magnetic drums for data
storage.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


SECOND GENERATION
(1956-1963)

 Throughout the early 1960's, there were a


number of commercially successful second
generation computers used in business,
universities, and government from
companies such as Burroughs, Control Data,
Honeywell, IBM, Sperry-Rand, and others.
These second generation computers were
also of solid state design, and contained
transistors in place of vacuum tubes.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


SECOND GENERATION
(1956-1963)

They also contained all the components we


associate with the modern day computer: printers,
tape storage, disk storage, memory, operating systems,
and stored programs. One important example was the
IBM 1401, which was universally accepted throughout
industry, and is considered by many to be the Model T
of the computer industry. By 1965, most large business
routinely processed financial information using
second generation computers.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


THIRD GENERATION
(1965-1971)

Though transistors were clearly an improvement


over the vacuum tube, they still generated a great deal
of heat, which damaged the computer's sensitive
internal parts. The quartz rock eliminated this
problem. Jack Kilby, an engineer with Texas
Instruments, developed the integrated circuit (IC) in
1958. The IC combined three electronic components
onto a small silicon disc, which was made from quartz.
Scientists later managed to fit even more components
on a single chip, called a semiconductor.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


THIRD GENERATION
(1965-1971)

As a result, computers became ever smaller as more


components were squeezed onto the chip. Another
third-generation development included the use of an
operating system that allowed machines to run many
different programs at once with a central program
that monitored and coordinated the computer's
memory.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


FOURTH GENERATION
(1971-Present)

In 1981, IBM introduced its personal


computer (PC) for use in the home, office and
schools. The 1980's saw an expansion in
computer use in all three arenas as clones of
the IBM PC made the personal computer
even more affordable. The number of
personal computers in use more than
doubled from 2 million in 1981 to 5.5 million
in 1982.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


FOURTH GENERATION
(1971-Present)

Ten years later, 65 million PCs were being used.


Computers continued their trend toward a smaller
size, working their way down from desktop to laptop
computers (which could fit inside a briefcase) to
palmtop (able to fit inside a breast pocket). In direct
competition with IBM's PC was Apple's Macintosh
line, introduced in 1984. Notable for its user-friendly
design, the Macintosh offered an operating system
that allowed users to move screen icons instead of
typing instructions

© J Wagner March 20, 200


FIFTH GENERATION
(Future)

Many advances in the science of computer design


and technology are coming together to enable the
creation of fifth-generation computers. Two such
engineering advances are parallel processing, which
replaces von Neumann's single central processing unit
design with a system harnessing the power of many
CPUs to work as one. Another advance is
superconductor technology, which allows the flow of
electricity with little or no resistance, greatly
improving the speed of information flow.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


FIFTH GENERATION
(Future)

Computers today have some attributes of


fifth generation computers. For example,
expert systems assist doctors in making
diagnoses by applying the problem-solving
steps a doctor might use in assessing a
patient's needs. It will take several more
years of development before expert systems
are in widespread use.

© J Wagner March 20, 200


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Information was gathered from the


following sites:
http://www.pbs.org/nerds/timeli
ne/micro.html (Triumph Of The
Nerds)
http://www.digitalcentury.com/e
ncyclo/update/comp_hd.html
(Digital Century)
http://humlink.humanities.mcmas
ter.ca/~dalberto/comweb.htm
(History of Computers)
© J Wagner March 20, 200

You might also like