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Universidade Presbiteriana
       Mackenzie



       A Brief History of Computers
          From the early days to the mainframes




  Faculdade de Computação e Informática
              São Paulo, Brasil
To plan your future wisely is necessary to
  know the past of the tools you will use
Sometimes planning is difficult since we face the arrogance of the
                         owners of the truth…
•    "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers.“ - Thomas Watson, chairman of
     IBM, 1943

•    "Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons.“ - Popular Mechanics,
     forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949

•    "I have traveled the length and breadth of this country and talked with the best people,
     and I can assure you that data processing is a fad that won't last out the year.“ - The editor
     in charge of business books for Prentice Hall, 1957

•    "There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.“ - Ken Olson,
     president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp., 1977

•    "640k ought to be enough for anybody.“ - Bill Gates, 1981

•    "We don't like their sound, and guitar music is on the way out.“ - Decca Recording Co.
     rejecting the Beatles, 1962.
So, let's talk a little
about the history of
computers – maybe
it can help you…
The early days
Abacus – c. 4000 BCE
       On the left, you see two abacuses (abaci is
          also correct). On both abacuses, we see the
          number 1998. The top area of each abacus
          is used for fives, and the bottom area is
          used for ones. Abacuses are used for doing
          arithmetic. When doing arithmetic, you
          move the beads. The position of the beads
          represents the sum, or product, so far. It is
          how you can remember the partial sum or
          product.
       Experts in the use of the abacus can be very
          fast (and accurate), often faster than an
          expert with a calculator, especially addition
          and subtraction.
       The abacus is still a mainstay of basic
          computation in some societies.
Slide rules
The slide rule, also known colloquially as a slipstick,is a
mechanical analog computer. The slide rule is used
primarily for multiplication and division, and also for
functions such as roots, logarithms and trigonometry, but is
not normally used for addition or subtraction.

William Oughtred and others developed the slide rule in the
17th century based on the emerging work on logarithms by
John Napier.
                                                               Napier
Before the advent of the pocket
calculator, the slide rule was the
most commonly used calculation
tool in science and engineering.
The use of slide rules continued
to grow through the 1950s and
1960s even as digital computing
devices were being gradually
introduced; but around 1974 the
electronic scientific calculator
made it largely obsolete and most
suppliers left the business.
Wilhelm Schickard (1592 –1635) was
a German scientist who designed a
calculating machine in 1623.

Unfortunately a fire destroyed the
machine as it was being built in 1624
and Schickard decided to abandon his
project.

Unknown to the world for more than
three centuries it was rediscovered in
1957 and therefore had no impact on
the development of mechanical
calculators
Blaise Pascal, a famous French
philosopher and mathematician
invented the first digital calculator, the
Pascaline, to help his father with his
work collecting taxes.


He worked on it for three years between
1642 and 1645.


The device resembled a mechanical
calculator of the 1940's. It could add
and subtract by the simple rotation of
dials on the machine’s face.
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646 –1716) was a
German philosopher and mathematician.


While working on adding automatic multiplication
and division to Pascal's calculator, he was the first
to describe a pinwheel calculator in 1685 and
invented the Leibniz wheel, used in the
arithmometer, the first mass-produced mechanical
calculator.


He also refined the binary number system, which is
at the foundation of virtually all digital computers.
Joseph Marie Charles, nicknamed Jacquard
                                 (1752– 1834, played an important role in the
                              development of the earliest programmable loom
                               (the "Jacquard loom"), which in turn played an
                                    important role in the development of other
                                programmable machines, such as computers.




• This portrait of Jacquard was woven in silk on a
Jacquard loom and required 24,000 punched cards
to create (1839).

• It was only produced to order.

• Charles Babbage owned one of these portraits ; it
inspired him in using perforated cards in his
analytical engine
Charles Xavier Thomas de Colmar (1785–1870) was a French
inventor and entrepreneur best known for designing, patenting
and manufacturing the first commercially successful mechanical
calculator, the Arithmometer.

The device was manufactured from 1851 to 1915 - there were
about 5,000 machines built during that time

Eventually about twenty European companies built clones of the
Arithmometer until the beginning of World War II.
Charles Babbage (1791 – 1871)
was an English mathematician
and is recognized today as the
Father of Computers because
his impressive designs for the
Difference Engine and
Analytical Engine foreshadowed
the invention of the modern
electronic digital computer.
The Difference Engine was
never fully built. Babbage       The
drew up the blueprints for it
                                 Difference
                                 Engine
while still an undergrad at
Cambridge University in
England.


But while it was in process of
being manufactured, he got a
better idea and left this work
unfinished in favor of the
Analytical Engine illustrated
on the next slide.
The Analytical Engine was
eventually built completely in the
latter half of the 19th century, by
Georg and Edvard Schuetz as per
Babbage’s blueprints.



Film footage exists of the
machine in operation, and it is                The Analytical Engine incorporated an
truly a sight to behold, a               arithmetical unit, control flow in the form of
testament not only to Babbage’s       conditional branching and loops, and integrated
genius, but also to the                  memory, making it the first Turing-complete
manufacturing prowess of the                  design for a general-purpose computer.
age.
Lady Augusta Ada, Countess of Lovelace
(1815 – 1856), was a mathematician who
helped Babbage in his work.


Above all, she documented his work, which
Babbage never could bother to do. As a
result we know about Babbage at all.


Lady Augusta Ada also wrote programs to
be run on Babbage’s machines, what made
her the first computer programmer.
Electro-mechanical
    computers
Hermann Hollerith (1860 – 1920) worked as a statistician
for the U.S. Census Bureau in the 1880s and 1890s.


The 1880 census took seven years to be processed.
Hollerith deduced that the next census would take longer
than ten years.


So, as the saying goes, “necessity became the mother of
invention” and Hollerith designed and built the Census
Counting Machine illustrated in the next slide.
Punched cards (a la Jacquard looms) were
used to collect the census data (the origin of
the IBM punched cards) and the cards were
fed into a sorting machine before being read
by the census counting machine which
recorded and tabulated the results.


The 1890 census took just three months to
process even though quite a bit more data
was collected than ever before.
Hollerith’s company, the Tabulating
Machine Company, became the
Computer Tabulating Recording
Company in 1913 after merging with
another company that produced a
similar product.

1917: CTRC starts operations in Brazil;
the first big project was the 1920
census

In 1924, the company was renamed
International Business Machines (IBM)
Konrad Zuse and the Z3
•   The Z3 was an electromechanical computer
    designed by Konrad Zuse (1910-1995) , a
    German scientist.
•   The Z3 was one of the first machines that
    could be considered a complete computing
    machine. Program code and data were stored
    on punched 35 mm film.
•   The Z3 was completed in Berlin in 1941. The
    German Aircraft Research Institute used it to
    perform statistical analyses of wing flutter;
    the machine was destroyed in 1943 during
    an Allied bombardment.
•   Zuse asked the German government for
    money to develop a new machine, but
    funding was denied, since such development
    was deemed "not war-important"
While being a professor of Physics at Harvard, Howard Aiken (1900 – 1973) was
supported by IBM to build the ASCC computer (Automatic Sequence Controlled
Calculator), aka Harvard Mark I.


The computer had mechanical relays (switches) which flip-flopped back and forth to
represent mathematical data. It was huge, weighting some 35 tons with 500 miles of
wiring.
Rear Admiral Grace Murray
Hopper (1906 –1992) was an
American computer scientist and
United States Navy officer.

A pioneer in the field, she was one
of the first computer
programmers, and developed the
first compiler for a computer
programming language.

She conceptualized the idea of
machine-independent
programming languages, which
led to the development of COBOL.
One day, the program Dr. Hopper was running gave incorrect results
and, upon examination, a moth was found blocking one of the
relays. The bug was removed and the program performed to
perfection. Since then, a program error in a computer has been
called a bug
From the electro-
mechanical computers to
      mainframes
The vacuum tube
In electronics, a vacuum tube ("tube" or "valve") is a
device that can be used to replace electromechanical
relays, because it is faster

Valves made electronic computing possible for the
first time, but the cost and relatively short Mean Time
Between Failure (MBTF) of valves were limiting
factors in the 1930s.

Later work confirmed that tube unreliability was not as
serious an issue as generally believed; the 1946
ENIAC, with over 17,000 tubes, had a tube failure
(which took 15 minutes to locate and fix) on average
every two days.
Alan Mathison Turing (1912 – 1954),
was an English mathematician,
cryptographer and computer scientist.

He was highly influential in the
development of computer science,
providing a formalization of the concepts
of "algorithm" and "computation" with
the Turing machine, which played a
significant role in the creation of the
modern computer.

Turing is widely considered to be the
father of computer science and artificial
intelligence.
During WWII Turing made a major contribution to
                                  the development of a sophisticated computing
                                  machine called Colossus which was used to help
                                  crack the codes of the German Enigma Machine.

                                  The Enigma machine was an electro-mechanical
                                  machine used for the encryption and decryption of
                                  secret messages, widely used for the Germans in
                                  the war.

                                  Turing’s work helped Allied codebreakers to
                                  decrypt a vast number of messages that had been
                                  enciphered using the Enigma. The intelligence
                                  gleaned from this source was a substantial aid to
                                  the Allied war effort.

                                  The BBC broadcasted in 1991 the serie 'The dream
                                  machine‘. You can know something more about
                                  Turing   and    his   work    visiting
Germans working with the Enigma   http://www.youtube.com/watch?
                                  v=NbhbssXWDAE&feature=related
The Colossus
Eleven Colossus
were built during
World War II (one
Mark 1, ten Mark
2) – the first
started running in
Feb 1944.
Colossus Mark 1 contained 1,500 electronic valves;
Colossus Mark 2 with 2,400 valves was both 5 times
faster and simpler to operate than Mark 1, greatly
speeding the decoding process.
Alan Turing: a tragic character
•   Turing was an athlete: he achieved world-class Marathon standards - his best time was
    only 11 minutes slower than the winner in the 1948 Olympic Games. In a 1948 cross-
    country race he finished ahead of Tom Richards who won the silver medal in the Olympics.

•   Turing's homosexuality resulted in a criminal prosecution in 1952, when homosexual acts
    were still illegal in the United Kingdom. He accepted treatment with female hormones
    (chemical castration) as an alternative to prison

•   He died in 1954, several weeks before his 42nd birthday, from cyanide poisoning - an
    inquest determined it was suicide. When his body was discovered an apple lay half-eaten
    beside his bed, and although the apple was not tested for cyanide, it is speculated that
    this was the mean by which a fatal dose was delivered.

•   On 10 September 2009, following an Internet campaign, British Prime Minister Gordon
    Brown made an official public apology on behalf of the British government for the way in
    which Turing was treated after the war
The ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer
This 1946 photograph
shows ENIAC , the first
general purpose
electronic computer,
housed at the
University of
Pennsylvania.


Developed in secret
starting in 1943, ENIAC
was designed to
calculate artillery firing
tables for the US Army.
The ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer

When ENIAC was announced in 1946 it
was heralded in the press as a "Giant
Brain“ (in Brazil, “Cérebro Eletrônico”). It
boasted speeds one thousand times faster
than electro-mechanical machines.


The inventors of ENIAC promoted the
spread of the new technologies through a
series of lectures on the construction of
electronic digital computers at the
University of Pennsylvania in 1946, known
as the Moore School Lectures.
The ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer
Besides its speed, the most remarkable thing
about ENIAC was its size and complexity.

ENIAC contained 17,468 valves, around 5
million hand-soldered joints. It weighed 30 ton.,
was roughly 2.4 m × 0.9 m × 30 m and took
up 167 m2.

Input was possible from an IBM card reader,
and an IBM card punch was used for output.
These cards could be used to produce printed
output offline using an IBM accounting
machine, such as the IBM 405.                            Programming the ENIAC


The task of programming was complex. After the program was figured out on paper,
the process of getting the program "into" the ENIAC by manipulating its switches and
cables took days. This was followed by a period of verification and debugging.
John von Neumann was a
mathematician working on the
hydrogen bomb project and became
aware of the ENIAC


Von Neumann came up with the bright
idea of using part of the ENIAC
internal memory (called Primary
Memory) to “store” the program inside
the computer and have the computer
go get the instructions from its own
memory - the stored program concept
was born!
Scandal!
ENIAC was conceived and designed by John Mauchly and J. Presper
Eckert of the University of Pennsylvania – they stole ideas from John
Vincent Atanasoff , from the Iowa State University and Clifford Berry.


Mauchly and Eckert successfully filed for the patent as inventors of the
electronic digital computer, ignoring Berry and Atanasoff’s work.


In 1972, this injustice was rectified when Honeywell (for Atanasoff)
successfully challenged Sperry Rand (the company that acquired
Eckert and Mauchly’s patent), and Atanasoff and Berry were credited
as being the inventors of the electronic digital computer.
-.
EDSAC
•   The Electronic Delay Storage
    Automatic Calculator (EDSAC)
    was a UK made computer.
•   The machine, having been
    inspired by John von Neumann's
    ideas was the first practical
    stored-program electronic
    computer.
•   EDSAC ran its first program on
    6 May 1949
•   Later the project was supported by J. Lyons & Co. Ltd., a British restaurant-chain,
    food manufacturing and hotel conglomerate founded in 1887, who were
    rewarded with the first commercially applied computer, LEO I, based on the
    EDSAC design.
The Transistor era
• The transistor is the fundamental
  building block of modern electronic
  devices, and is ubiquitous in modern
  electronic systems. It replaced the valves
• Following its release in the early 1950s
  the transistor revolutionized the field of
  electronics, and paved the way for
  smaller, faster and cheaper computers.
• John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and
  William Shockley (seated) working in
  the laboratory where they built the first
  transistor. Electronics magazine called
  the device a "Crystal Triode."
What was the first thing that we
built with this miraculous new
          technology?
A hearing aid ! ….1953

            Zenith Royal-T
           hearing aid - 3”
         tall, 2.5” wide




           A prehistoric iPod?
Followed
immediately
 by the first
   “pocket
  radio” in
    1954!
The TRADIC (for TRansistorized Airborne
DIgital Computer) was the first
transistorized computer, completed in 1954

The project initially examined the feasibility
of constructing a transistorized airborne
digital computer.

The TRADIC was small and light enough to
be installed in a B-52 Stratofortress
In the early 1950s, there were three main
            computers makers

         • UNIVAC

         • Burroughs

         • IBM
• March 1951: the Census Bureau
accepted delivery of the first
UNIVAC computer - Remington
Rand became the first American
manufacturers of a commercial
computer system


• Their first non-government
contract was for General Electric's
Appliance Park facility in Louisville,
Kentucky, who used the UNIVAC
computer for a payroll application.
Univac was used to forecast the 1952 presidential election (USA)
                                     Polls gave the 1952 Presidential
                                     election to Adlai Stevenson. UNIVAC,
                                     star of CBS’ election coverage,
                                     predicted an Eisenhower landslide.
                                     UNIVAC was right.



                                     The computer’s TV debut captivated
                                     an audience already enthralled by
                                     technology and confronting new
                                     tools—and new terminology—
                                     almost daily.
Computers in popular culture
“UNIVAC” became synonymous
with “computer” to the
American public in the 1950s.
This comic book combines
computerized matchmaking,
which began in the late 1950s,
with a popular television dating
show format
THE 2ND GENERATION COMPUTERS (from 1955)

• Programming languages such as FORTRAN (FORmula TRANslator) and
COBOL (COmmon Business Oriented Language) were developed at that
time
• Typical of that era were the IBM 1401 and Burroughs B200
• Smaller in size
• All transistorized
• Reliable




             Burroughs B200                        IBM 1401
In 1957 the first computer
came to Brazil. It was a
Univac 120, purchased by
the State of Sao Paulo to
control the water supply
service in the capital.




We talked a lot about Univac, which was the first e bigger computer
manufacturer and no longer exists. You can guess why?

 No planning, bad management!
In 1959 Anderson Clayton bought a IBM 305 RAMAC,
         the first computer in the Brazilian private sector




                                                              RAMAC’s HD


IBM 305 RAMAC, announced 1956, was the first commercial computer that used a
moving head hard disk drive (5 MB, 1 ton) for secondary storage. RAMAC stood for
"Random Access Method of Accounting and Control".
In the 60's, the world was in the middle of
the space race. With that came the need
to build lightweight and powerful
computers that could be embedded in
rockets.

NASA has spent billions of dollars on its
space program in the hiring of
manufacturers of transistors to perform an
even more radical miniaturization.

Thus were created the first integrated
circuits, also called chips. Basically, a chip
is an electronic component comprising
hundreds or thousands of transistors.

This led to the third generation of
computers
Example of this time is the IBM 360,
   sold between 1964 and 1978
Programming in the 1960’s and 1970’s




IBM programmer drawing a flowchart
​
 Data entry at the time could be made with
punched paper tape (replacing the punched
                    cards)
Data were mainly stored in magnetic
tapes and disks, such as the IBM 2314
           (1966, 30 mb)
Hard disk in 1980: 1 gb, 250 kg , US$ 81.000
From that point, mainframe
 computers have evolved to the
point where they are today, even
   using elements also used in
        microcomputers
z10 EC – Under the covers (Model E56 or E64)


         Internal                              Processor Books,
                                               Memory, MBA and
         Batteries
                                                  HCA cards
        (optional)
                                                Ethernet cables for
     Power
                                                 internal System
    Supplies
                                                  LAN connecting
                                                    Flexible Service
 2 x Support                                        Processor (FSP)
  Elements                                          cage controller
                                                          cards
                                                    InfiniBand I/O
                                                    Interconnects
          3x
         I/O                                           2 x Cooling
        cages                                             Units



Fiber Quick Connect                                         FICON &
   (FQC) Feature                                            ESCON
                                                            FQC
     (optional)
                                                             57
And to avoid this...
Os autores agradecem seus comentários
      através do vjbreternitz@mackenzie.br

Prof. Esp. Elisabete Panssonatto Breternitz




     Prof. Dr. Vivaldo José Breternitz

Acad. Marta D. Magalhães Santos
vjbreternitz@mackenzie.br

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A Brief History of Early Computers

  • 1. Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie A Brief History of Computers From the early days to the mainframes Faculdade de Computação e Informática São Paulo, Brasil
  • 2. To plan your future wisely is necessary to know the past of the tools you will use
  • 3. Sometimes planning is difficult since we face the arrogance of the owners of the truth… • "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers.“ - Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943 • "Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons.“ - Popular Mechanics, forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949 • "I have traveled the length and breadth of this country and talked with the best people, and I can assure you that data processing is a fad that won't last out the year.“ - The editor in charge of business books for Prentice Hall, 1957 • "There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.“ - Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp., 1977 • "640k ought to be enough for anybody.“ - Bill Gates, 1981 • "We don't like their sound, and guitar music is on the way out.“ - Decca Recording Co. rejecting the Beatles, 1962.
  • 4. So, let's talk a little about the history of computers – maybe it can help you…
  • 6. Abacus – c. 4000 BCE On the left, you see two abacuses (abaci is also correct). On both abacuses, we see the number 1998. The top area of each abacus is used for fives, and the bottom area is used for ones. Abacuses are used for doing arithmetic. When doing arithmetic, you move the beads. The position of the beads represents the sum, or product, so far. It is how you can remember the partial sum or product. Experts in the use of the abacus can be very fast (and accurate), often faster than an expert with a calculator, especially addition and subtraction. The abacus is still a mainstay of basic computation in some societies.
  • 7. Slide rules The slide rule, also known colloquially as a slipstick,is a mechanical analog computer. The slide rule is used primarily for multiplication and division, and also for functions such as roots, logarithms and trigonometry, but is not normally used for addition or subtraction. William Oughtred and others developed the slide rule in the 17th century based on the emerging work on logarithms by John Napier. Napier
  • 8. Before the advent of the pocket calculator, the slide rule was the most commonly used calculation tool in science and engineering. The use of slide rules continued to grow through the 1950s and 1960s even as digital computing devices were being gradually introduced; but around 1974 the electronic scientific calculator made it largely obsolete and most suppliers left the business.
  • 9. Wilhelm Schickard (1592 –1635) was a German scientist who designed a calculating machine in 1623. Unfortunately a fire destroyed the machine as it was being built in 1624 and Schickard decided to abandon his project. Unknown to the world for more than three centuries it was rediscovered in 1957 and therefore had no impact on the development of mechanical calculators
  • 10. Blaise Pascal, a famous French philosopher and mathematician invented the first digital calculator, the Pascaline, to help his father with his work collecting taxes. He worked on it for three years between 1642 and 1645. The device resembled a mechanical calculator of the 1940's. It could add and subtract by the simple rotation of dials on the machine’s face.
  • 11. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646 –1716) was a German philosopher and mathematician. While working on adding automatic multiplication and division to Pascal's calculator, he was the first to describe a pinwheel calculator in 1685 and invented the Leibniz wheel, used in the arithmometer, the first mass-produced mechanical calculator. He also refined the binary number system, which is at the foundation of virtually all digital computers.
  • 12. Joseph Marie Charles, nicknamed Jacquard (1752– 1834, played an important role in the development of the earliest programmable loom (the "Jacquard loom"), which in turn played an important role in the development of other programmable machines, such as computers. • This portrait of Jacquard was woven in silk on a Jacquard loom and required 24,000 punched cards to create (1839). • It was only produced to order. • Charles Babbage owned one of these portraits ; it inspired him in using perforated cards in his analytical engine
  • 13. Charles Xavier Thomas de Colmar (1785–1870) was a French inventor and entrepreneur best known for designing, patenting and manufacturing the first commercially successful mechanical calculator, the Arithmometer. The device was manufactured from 1851 to 1915 - there were about 5,000 machines built during that time Eventually about twenty European companies built clones of the Arithmometer until the beginning of World War II.
  • 14. Charles Babbage (1791 – 1871) was an English mathematician and is recognized today as the Father of Computers because his impressive designs for the Difference Engine and Analytical Engine foreshadowed the invention of the modern electronic digital computer.
  • 15. The Difference Engine was never fully built. Babbage The drew up the blueprints for it Difference Engine while still an undergrad at Cambridge University in England. But while it was in process of being manufactured, he got a better idea and left this work unfinished in favor of the Analytical Engine illustrated on the next slide.
  • 16. The Analytical Engine was eventually built completely in the latter half of the 19th century, by Georg and Edvard Schuetz as per Babbage’s blueprints. Film footage exists of the machine in operation, and it is The Analytical Engine incorporated an truly a sight to behold, a arithmetical unit, control flow in the form of testament not only to Babbage’s conditional branching and loops, and integrated genius, but also to the memory, making it the first Turing-complete manufacturing prowess of the design for a general-purpose computer. age.
  • 17. Lady Augusta Ada, Countess of Lovelace (1815 – 1856), was a mathematician who helped Babbage in his work. Above all, she documented his work, which Babbage never could bother to do. As a result we know about Babbage at all. Lady Augusta Ada also wrote programs to be run on Babbage’s machines, what made her the first computer programmer.
  • 18. Electro-mechanical computers
  • 19. Hermann Hollerith (1860 – 1920) worked as a statistician for the U.S. Census Bureau in the 1880s and 1890s. The 1880 census took seven years to be processed. Hollerith deduced that the next census would take longer than ten years. So, as the saying goes, “necessity became the mother of invention” and Hollerith designed and built the Census Counting Machine illustrated in the next slide.
  • 20. Punched cards (a la Jacquard looms) were used to collect the census data (the origin of the IBM punched cards) and the cards were fed into a sorting machine before being read by the census counting machine which recorded and tabulated the results. The 1890 census took just three months to process even though quite a bit more data was collected than ever before.
  • 21. Hollerith’s company, the Tabulating Machine Company, became the Computer Tabulating Recording Company in 1913 after merging with another company that produced a similar product. 1917: CTRC starts operations in Brazil; the first big project was the 1920 census In 1924, the company was renamed International Business Machines (IBM)
  • 22. Konrad Zuse and the Z3 • The Z3 was an electromechanical computer designed by Konrad Zuse (1910-1995) , a German scientist. • The Z3 was one of the first machines that could be considered a complete computing machine. Program code and data were stored on punched 35 mm film. • The Z3 was completed in Berlin in 1941. The German Aircraft Research Institute used it to perform statistical analyses of wing flutter; the machine was destroyed in 1943 during an Allied bombardment. • Zuse asked the German government for money to develop a new machine, but funding was denied, since such development was deemed "not war-important"
  • 23. While being a professor of Physics at Harvard, Howard Aiken (1900 – 1973) was supported by IBM to build the ASCC computer (Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator), aka Harvard Mark I. The computer had mechanical relays (switches) which flip-flopped back and forth to represent mathematical data. It was huge, weighting some 35 tons with 500 miles of wiring.
  • 24. Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper (1906 –1992) was an American computer scientist and United States Navy officer. A pioneer in the field, she was one of the first computer programmers, and developed the first compiler for a computer programming language. She conceptualized the idea of machine-independent programming languages, which led to the development of COBOL.
  • 25. One day, the program Dr. Hopper was running gave incorrect results and, upon examination, a moth was found blocking one of the relays. The bug was removed and the program performed to perfection. Since then, a program error in a computer has been called a bug
  • 26. From the electro- mechanical computers to mainframes
  • 27. The vacuum tube In electronics, a vacuum tube ("tube" or "valve") is a device that can be used to replace electromechanical relays, because it is faster Valves made electronic computing possible for the first time, but the cost and relatively short Mean Time Between Failure (MBTF) of valves were limiting factors in the 1930s. Later work confirmed that tube unreliability was not as serious an issue as generally believed; the 1946 ENIAC, with over 17,000 tubes, had a tube failure (which took 15 minutes to locate and fix) on average every two days.
  • 28. Alan Mathison Turing (1912 – 1954), was an English mathematician, cryptographer and computer scientist. He was highly influential in the development of computer science, providing a formalization of the concepts of "algorithm" and "computation" with the Turing machine, which played a significant role in the creation of the modern computer. Turing is widely considered to be the father of computer science and artificial intelligence.
  • 29. During WWII Turing made a major contribution to the development of a sophisticated computing machine called Colossus which was used to help crack the codes of the German Enigma Machine. The Enigma machine was an electro-mechanical machine used for the encryption and decryption of secret messages, widely used for the Germans in the war. Turing’s work helped Allied codebreakers to decrypt a vast number of messages that had been enciphered using the Enigma. The intelligence gleaned from this source was a substantial aid to the Allied war effort. The BBC broadcasted in 1991 the serie 'The dream machine‘. You can know something more about Turing and his work visiting Germans working with the Enigma http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=NbhbssXWDAE&feature=related
  • 30. The Colossus Eleven Colossus were built during World War II (one Mark 1, ten Mark 2) – the first started running in Feb 1944. Colossus Mark 1 contained 1,500 electronic valves; Colossus Mark 2 with 2,400 valves was both 5 times faster and simpler to operate than Mark 1, greatly speeding the decoding process.
  • 31. Alan Turing: a tragic character • Turing was an athlete: he achieved world-class Marathon standards - his best time was only 11 minutes slower than the winner in the 1948 Olympic Games. In a 1948 cross- country race he finished ahead of Tom Richards who won the silver medal in the Olympics. • Turing's homosexuality resulted in a criminal prosecution in 1952, when homosexual acts were still illegal in the United Kingdom. He accepted treatment with female hormones (chemical castration) as an alternative to prison • He died in 1954, several weeks before his 42nd birthday, from cyanide poisoning - an inquest determined it was suicide. When his body was discovered an apple lay half-eaten beside his bed, and although the apple was not tested for cyanide, it is speculated that this was the mean by which a fatal dose was delivered. • On 10 September 2009, following an Internet campaign, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown made an official public apology on behalf of the British government for the way in which Turing was treated after the war
  • 32. The ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer This 1946 photograph shows ENIAC , the first general purpose electronic computer, housed at the University of Pennsylvania. Developed in secret starting in 1943, ENIAC was designed to calculate artillery firing tables for the US Army.
  • 33. The ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer When ENIAC was announced in 1946 it was heralded in the press as a "Giant Brain“ (in Brazil, “Cérebro Eletrônico”). It boasted speeds one thousand times faster than electro-mechanical machines. The inventors of ENIAC promoted the spread of the new technologies through a series of lectures on the construction of electronic digital computers at the University of Pennsylvania in 1946, known as the Moore School Lectures.
  • 34. The ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer Besides its speed, the most remarkable thing about ENIAC was its size and complexity. ENIAC contained 17,468 valves, around 5 million hand-soldered joints. It weighed 30 ton., was roughly 2.4 m × 0.9 m × 30 m and took up 167 m2. Input was possible from an IBM card reader, and an IBM card punch was used for output. These cards could be used to produce printed output offline using an IBM accounting machine, such as the IBM 405. Programming the ENIAC The task of programming was complex. After the program was figured out on paper, the process of getting the program "into" the ENIAC by manipulating its switches and cables took days. This was followed by a period of verification and debugging.
  • 35. John von Neumann was a mathematician working on the hydrogen bomb project and became aware of the ENIAC Von Neumann came up with the bright idea of using part of the ENIAC internal memory (called Primary Memory) to “store” the program inside the computer and have the computer go get the instructions from its own memory - the stored program concept was born!
  • 36. Scandal! ENIAC was conceived and designed by John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert of the University of Pennsylvania – they stole ideas from John Vincent Atanasoff , from the Iowa State University and Clifford Berry. Mauchly and Eckert successfully filed for the patent as inventors of the electronic digital computer, ignoring Berry and Atanasoff’s work. In 1972, this injustice was rectified when Honeywell (for Atanasoff) successfully challenged Sperry Rand (the company that acquired Eckert and Mauchly’s patent), and Atanasoff and Berry were credited as being the inventors of the electronic digital computer. -.
  • 37. EDSAC • The Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator (EDSAC) was a UK made computer. • The machine, having been inspired by John von Neumann's ideas was the first practical stored-program electronic computer. • EDSAC ran its first program on 6 May 1949 • Later the project was supported by J. Lyons & Co. Ltd., a British restaurant-chain, food manufacturing and hotel conglomerate founded in 1887, who were rewarded with the first commercially applied computer, LEO I, based on the EDSAC design.
  • 38. The Transistor era • The transistor is the fundamental building block of modern electronic devices, and is ubiquitous in modern electronic systems. It replaced the valves • Following its release in the early 1950s the transistor revolutionized the field of electronics, and paved the way for smaller, faster and cheaper computers. • John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley (seated) working in the laboratory where they built the first transistor. Electronics magazine called the device a "Crystal Triode."
  • 39. What was the first thing that we built with this miraculous new technology?
  • 40. A hearing aid ! ….1953 Zenith Royal-T hearing aid - 3” tall, 2.5” wide A prehistoric iPod?
  • 41. Followed immediately by the first “pocket radio” in 1954!
  • 42. The TRADIC (for TRansistorized Airborne DIgital Computer) was the first transistorized computer, completed in 1954 The project initially examined the feasibility of constructing a transistorized airborne digital computer. The TRADIC was small and light enough to be installed in a B-52 Stratofortress
  • 43. In the early 1950s, there were three main computers makers • UNIVAC • Burroughs • IBM
  • 44. • March 1951: the Census Bureau accepted delivery of the first UNIVAC computer - Remington Rand became the first American manufacturers of a commercial computer system • Their first non-government contract was for General Electric's Appliance Park facility in Louisville, Kentucky, who used the UNIVAC computer for a payroll application.
  • 45. Univac was used to forecast the 1952 presidential election (USA) Polls gave the 1952 Presidential election to Adlai Stevenson. UNIVAC, star of CBS’ election coverage, predicted an Eisenhower landslide. UNIVAC was right. The computer’s TV debut captivated an audience already enthralled by technology and confronting new tools—and new terminology— almost daily.
  • 46. Computers in popular culture “UNIVAC” became synonymous with “computer” to the American public in the 1950s. This comic book combines computerized matchmaking, which began in the late 1950s, with a popular television dating show format
  • 47. THE 2ND GENERATION COMPUTERS (from 1955) • Programming languages such as FORTRAN (FORmula TRANslator) and COBOL (COmmon Business Oriented Language) were developed at that time • Typical of that era were the IBM 1401 and Burroughs B200 • Smaller in size • All transistorized • Reliable Burroughs B200 IBM 1401
  • 48. In 1957 the first computer came to Brazil. It was a Univac 120, purchased by the State of Sao Paulo to control the water supply service in the capital. We talked a lot about Univac, which was the first e bigger computer manufacturer and no longer exists. You can guess why? No planning, bad management!
  • 49. In 1959 Anderson Clayton bought a IBM 305 RAMAC, the first computer in the Brazilian private sector RAMAC’s HD IBM 305 RAMAC, announced 1956, was the first commercial computer that used a moving head hard disk drive (5 MB, 1 ton) for secondary storage. RAMAC stood for "Random Access Method of Accounting and Control".
  • 50. In the 60's, the world was in the middle of the space race. With that came the need to build lightweight and powerful computers that could be embedded in rockets. NASA has spent billions of dollars on its space program in the hiring of manufacturers of transistors to perform an even more radical miniaturization. Thus were created the first integrated circuits, also called chips. Basically, a chip is an electronic component comprising hundreds or thousands of transistors. This led to the third generation of computers
  • 51. Example of this time is the IBM 360, sold between 1964 and 1978
  • 52. Programming in the 1960’s and 1970’s IBM programmer drawing a flowchart
  • 53. ​ Data entry at the time could be made with punched paper tape (replacing the punched cards)
  • 54. Data were mainly stored in magnetic tapes and disks, such as the IBM 2314 (1966, 30 mb)
  • 55. Hard disk in 1980: 1 gb, 250 kg , US$ 81.000
  • 56. From that point, mainframe computers have evolved to the point where they are today, even using elements also used in microcomputers
  • 57. z10 EC – Under the covers (Model E56 or E64) Internal Processor Books, Memory, MBA and Batteries HCA cards (optional) Ethernet cables for Power internal System Supplies LAN connecting Flexible Service 2 x Support Processor (FSP) Elements cage controller cards InfiniBand I/O Interconnects 3x I/O 2 x Cooling cages Units Fiber Quick Connect FICON & (FQC) Feature ESCON FQC (optional) 57
  • 58. And to avoid this...
  • 59. Os autores agradecem seus comentários através do vjbreternitz@mackenzie.br Prof. Esp. Elisabete Panssonatto Breternitz Prof. Dr. Vivaldo José Breternitz Acad. Marta D. Magalhães Santos

Notas del editor

  1. The is a picture of the first computer bug. The lady is U.S. Rear Admiral Dr. Grace Murray Hopper, who worked with Howard Aiken from 1944 and used his machine for gunnery and ballistics calculation for the US Bureau of Ordnance’s Computation project. One day, the program she was running gave incorrect results and, upon examination, a moth was found blocking one of the relays. The bug was removed and the program performed to perfection. Since then, a program error in a computer has been called a bug, even though it would take a mighty tiny bug to interfere with the workings of a modern microscopic microprocessor. Nancy Head has contributed the following additional information about Dr. Hopper: Dr. Hopper greatly simplified programming through the COBOL language which was the first programming language to allow the use of regular English for variable names and logical operations. She also introduced the concept and standardization of "compilers“, now a standard feature of programming languages. The compiler translates the programmer’s code into machine language, thus sparing the programmer the onerous task of doing it it herself. This contributed to business use of computers and modern data processing because regular businesspersons and scientists (not just mathematicians and computer scientists) could learn to program computers. More about her life and software engineering contributions can be found at h ttp://www.sdsc.edu/ScienceWomen/hopper.html and http://www.cs.yale.edu/homes/tap/Files/hopper-story.html . Some fun/interesting quotes from her can be found at http://www.cs.yale.edu/homes/tap/Files/hopper-wit.html .
  2. The is a picture of the first computer bug. The lady is U.S. Rear Admiral Dr. Grace Murray Hopper, who worked with Howard Aiken from 1944 and used his machine for gunnery and ballistics calculation for the US Bureau of Ordnance’s Computation project. One day, the program she was running gave incorrect results and, upon examination, a moth was found blocking one of the relays. The bug was removed and the program performed to perfection. Since then, a program error in a computer has been called a bug, even though it would take a mighty tiny bug to interfere with the workings of a modern microscopic microprocessor. Nancy Head has contributed the following additional information about Dr. Hopper: Dr. Hopper greatly simplified programming through the COBOL language which was the first programming language to allow the use of regular English for variable names and logical operations. She also introduced the concept and standardization of "compilers“, now a standard feature of programming languages. The compiler translates the programmer’s code into machine language, thus sparing the programmer the onerous task of doing it it herself. This contributed to business use of computers and modern data processing because regular businesspersons and scientists (not just mathematicians and computer scientists) could learn to program computers. More about her life and software engineering contributions can be found at h ttp://www.sdsc.edu/ScienceWomen/hopper.html and http://www.cs.yale.edu/homes/tap/Files/hopper-story.html . Some fun/interesting quotes from her can be found at http://www.cs.yale.edu/homes/tap/Files/hopper-wit.html .
  3. The ENIAC: 30 tons, 18,000 vacuum tubes, with the computing power of little more than the modern calculator…..
  4. The ENIAC: 30 tons, 18,000 vacuum tubes, with the computing power of little more than the modern calculator…..
  5. The ENIAC: 30 tons, 18,000 vacuum tubes, with the computing power of little more than the modern calculator…..
  6. Like all the earliest electronic digital computers, the ENIAC was programmed manually; that is to say, the programmers wrote the programs out on paper, then literally set the program for the computer to perform by rewiring it or hard-wiring it—plugging and unplugging the wires on the outside of the machine. Hence all those external wires in the picture above and on the previous slide. Then along came John Von Neumann, who worked at Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study and who collaborated with Eckert and Mauchly. He came up with the bright idea of using part of the computer’s internal memory (called Primary Memory) to “store” the program inside the computer and have the computer go get the instructions from its own memory, just as we do with our human brain. Neato! No more intricate, complex, cumbersome external wiring. Much faster; much more efficient. Unfortunately, it didn’t solve the problem of the possibility of error. As long as humans are around, we’ll always have that! It’s iroonic that Eckert and Mauchly were upset when Von Neumann was given credit for this “stored program concept,” because they thought they deserved it, too. Now why didn’t they think the same about Atanasoff? Go figure!
  7. The ENIAC: 30 tons, 18,000 vacuum tubes, with the computing power of little more than the modern calculator…..