SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 60
The History of Computers
The FIRST COMPUTERS The first computers were people!  That is, electronic computers (and the earlier mechanical computers) were given this name because they performed the work that had previously been assigned to people.  "Computer" was originally a job title: it was used to describe those human beings (predominantly women) whose job it was to perform the repetitive calculations required to compute such things as navigational tables, tide charts, and planetary positions for astronomical almanacs.
A typical computer operation back when computers were people.
The ABACUS The abacus was an early aid for mathematical computations. Its only value is that it aids the memory of the human performing the calculation. A skilled abacus operator can work on addition and subtraction problems at the speed of a person equipped with a hand calculator (multiplication and division are slower).
The abacus is often wrongly attributed to China. In fact, the oldest surviving abacus was used in 300 B.C. by the Babylonians. The abacus is still in use today, principally in the far east. A modern abacus consists of rings that slide over rods, but the older one pictured below dates from the time when pebbles were used for counting (the word "calculus" comes from the Latin word for pebble).
The LOGARITHMSIn 1617 an eccentric (some say mad) Scotsman named John Napier invented logarithms, which are a technology that allows multiplication to be performed via addition. The magic ingredient is the logarithm of each operand, which was originally obtained from a printed table. But Napier also invented an alternative to tables, where the logarithm values were carved on ivory sticks which are now called Napier's Bones.
A more Modern NAPIER’S BONE Napier's invention led directly to the slide rule, first built in England in 1632 and still in use in the 1960's by the NASA engineers of the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs which landed men on the moon
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) made drawings of  gear-driven calculating machines but apparently never built any.
The FIRST Gear Driven Calculating Machine The first gear-driven calculating machine to actually be built was probably the calculating clock, so named by its inventor, the German professor Wilhelm Schickard in 1623. This device got little publicity because Schickard died soon afterward in the bubonic plague.
Pascal’s Pascaline In 1642 Blaise Pascal, at age 19, invented the Pascaline as an aid for his father who was a tax collector. Pascal built 50 of this gear-driven one-function calculator (it could only add) but couldn't sell many because of their exorbitant cost and because they really weren't that accurate (at that time it was not possible to fabricate gears with the required precision).  Up until the present age when car dashboards went digital, the odometer portion of a car's speedometer used the very same mechanism as the Pascaline to increment the next wheel after each full revolution of the prior wheel. Pascal was a child prodigy.  At the age of 12, he was discovered doing his version of Euclid's thirty-second proposition on the kitchen floor. Pascal went on to invent probability theory, the hydraulic press, and the syringe. Shown below is an 8 digit version of the Pascaline, and two views of a 6 digit version:
The Stepped Reckoner Just a few years after Pascal, the German Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (co-inventor with Newton of calculus) managed to build a four-function (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division) calculator that he called the stepped reckoner because, instead of gears, it employed fluted drums having ten flutes arranged around their circumference in a stair-step fashion. Although the stepped reckoner employed the decimal number system (each drum had 10 flutes), Leibniz was the first to advocate use of the binary number system which is fundamental to the operation of modern computers. Leibniz is considered one of the greatest of the philosophers but he died poor and alone.
Leibniz's Stepped Reckoner
Jacquard’s Loom In 1801 the Frenchman Joseph Marie Jacquard invented a power loom that could base its weave (and hence the design on the fabric) upon a pattern automatically read from punched wooden cards, held together in a long row by rope. Descendents of these punched cards have been in use ever since.
By selecting particular cards for Jacquard's loom you defined the woven pattern  Title
	Jacquard's technology was a real boon to mill owners, but put many loom operators out of work. Angry mobs smashed Jacquard looms and once attacked Jacquard himself. History is full of examples of labor unrest following technological innovation yet most studies show that, overall, technology has actually increased the number of jobs.
The Difference Engine of CHARLES BABBAGE By 1822 the English mathematician Charles Babbage was proposing a steam driven calculating machine the size of a room, which he called the Difference Engine.  This machine would be able to compute tables of numbers, such as logarithm tables. He obtained government funding for this project due to the importance of numeric tables in ocean navigation.  By promoting their commercial and military navies, the British government had managed to become the earth's greatest empire. But in that time frame the British government was publishing a seven volume set of navigation tables which came with a companion volume of corrections which showed that the set had over 1000 numerical errors.
The Difference Engine of CHARLES BABBAGE It was hoped that Babbage's machine could eliminate errors in these types of tables. But construction of Babbage's Difference Engine proved exceedingly difficult and the project soon became the most expensive government funded project up to that point in English history. Ten years later the device was still nowhere near complete, acrimony abounded between all involved, and funding dried up. The device was never finished.
Babbage befriended Ada Byron, the daughter of the famous poet Lord Byron (Ada would later become the Countess Lady Lovelace by marriage). Though she was only 19, she was fascinated by Babbage's ideas and thru letters and meetings with Babbage she learned enough about the design of the Analytic Engine to begin fashioning programs for the still unbuilt machine.  While Babbage refused to publish his knowledge for another 30 years, Ada wrote a series of "Notes" wherein she detailed sequences of instructions she had prepared for the Analytic Engine. The Analytic Engine remained unbuilt (the British government refused to get involved with this one) but Ada earned her spot in history as the first computer programmer.  Ada invented the subroutine and was the first to recognize the importance of looping. Babbage himself went on to invent the modern postal system, cowcatchers on trains, and the ophthalmoscope, which is still used today to treat the eye.
Hollerith Desk The U.S. Constitution states that a census should be taken of all U.S. citizens every 10 years in order to determine the representation of the states in Congress. While the very first census of 1790 had only required 9 months, by 1880 the U.S. population had grown so much that the count for the 1880 census took 7.5 years. Automation was clearly needed for the next census. The census bureau offered a prize for an inventor to help with the 1890 census and this prize was won by Herman Hollerith, who proposed and then successfully adopted Jacquard's punched cards for the purpose of computation
Hollerith's invention, known as the Hollerith desk, consisted of a card reader which sensed the holes in the cards, a gear driven mechanism which could count (using Pascal's mechanism which we still see in car odometers), and a large wall of dial indicators (a car speedometer is a dial indicator) to display the results of the count. Hollerith's technique was successful and the 1890 census was completed in only 3 years at a savings of 5 million dollars.  Hollerith built a company, the Tabulating Machine Company which, after a few buyouts, eventually became International Business Machines, known today as IBM. IBM grew rapidly and punched cards became ubiquitous.
IBM continued to develop mechanical calculators for sale to businesses to help with financial accounting and inventory accounting. One characteristic of both financial accounting and inventory accounting is that although you need to subtract, you don't need negative numbers and you really don't have to multiply since multiplication can be accomplished via repeated addition. But the U.S. military desired a mechanical calculator more optimized for scientific computation. By World War II the U.S. had battleships that could lob shells weighing as much as a small car over distances up to 25 miles. Physicists could write the equations that described how atmospheric drag, wind, gravity, muzzle velocity, etc. would determine the trajectory of the shell. But solving such equations was extremely laborious. This was the work performed by the human computers.
MARK I One early success was the Harvard Mark I computer which was built as a partnership between Harvard and IBM in 1944. This was the first programmable digital computer made in the U.S. But it was not a purely electronic computer. Instead the Mark I was constructed out of switches, relays, rotating shafts, and clutches. The machine weighed 5 tons, incorporated 500 miles of wire, was 8 feet tall and 51 feet long, and had a 50 ft rotating shaft running its length, turned by a 5 horsepower electric motor
One of the primary programmers for the Mark I was a woman, Grace Hopper. Hopper found the first computer "bug": a dead moth that had gotten into the Mark I and whose wings were blocking the reading of the holes in the paper tape. The word "bug" had been used to describe a defect since at least 1889 but Hopper is credited with coining the word "debugging" to describe the work to eliminate program faults.
The FIRST PERSONAL COMPUTER A home computer of 1976 such as this Apple I which sold for only $600:
Computers had been incredibly expensive because they required so much hand assembly, such as the wiring seen in this  CDC 7600:
The Microelectronic Revolution An integrated circuit ("silicon chip")
The Atanasoff-Berry Computer One of the earliest attempts to build an all-electronic (that is, no gears, cams, belts, shafts, etc.) digital computer occurred in 1937 by J. V. Atanasoff, a professor  of physics and mathematics at Iowa State University. By 1941 he and his graduate student, Clifford Berry, had succeeded in building a machine that could solve 29 simultaneous equations with 29 unknowns.  This machine was the first to store data as a charge on a capacitor, which is how today's computers store information in their main memory (DRAM or dynamic RAM). As far as its inventors were aware, it was also the first to employ binary arithmetic.  However, the machine was not programmable, it lacked a conditional branch, its design was appropriate for only one type of mathematical problem, and it was not further pursued after World War II. It's inventors didn't even bother to preserve the machine and it was dismantled by those who moved into the room where it lay abandoned.
The Colossus Another candidate for granddaddy of the modern computer was Colossus, built during World War II by Britain for the purpose of breaking the cryptographic codes used by Germany. Britain led the world in designing and building electronic machines dedicated to code breaking, and was routinely able to read coded Germany radio transmissions. But Colossus was definitely not a general purpose, reprogrammable machine.
The Harvard Mark I, the Atanasoff-Berry computer, and the British Colossus all made important contributions. American and British computer pioneers were still arguing over who was first to do what
Zuse ZI ,[object Object]
Probably the first operational, general-purpose, programmable (that is, software controlled) digital computer.,[object Object]
Forefather of Today's all-Electronic Digital Computers
Forefather of Today's all-Electronic Digital Computers The title of forefather of today's all-electronic digital computers is usually awarded to ENIAC, which stood for Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator. ENIAC was built at the University of Pennsylvania between 1943 and 1945 by two professors, John Mauchly and the 24 year old J. Presper Eckert, who got funding from the war department after promising they could build a machine that would replace all the "computers", meaning the women who were employed calculating the firing tables for the army's artillery guns.
Forefather of Today's all-Electronic Digital Computers ENIAC filled a 20 by 40 foot room, weighed 30 tons, and used more than 18,000 vacuum tubes. Like the Mark I, ENIAC employed paper card readers obtained from IBM (these were a regular product for IBM, as they were a long established part of business accounting machines, IBM's forte). When operating, the ENIAC was silent but you knew it was on as the 18,000 vacuum tubes each generated waste heat like a light bulb and all this heat (174,000 watts of heat) meant that the computer could only be operated in a specially designed room with its own heavy duty air conditioning system.
"Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator" (note that it wasn't even given the name of computer since "computers" were people)
Reprogramming ENIAC involved a hike
ILLIAC After ENIAC and EDVAC came other computers with humorous names such as ILLIAC, JOHNNIAC, and, of course, MANIAC. ILLIAC was built at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana
ILLIAC II built at the University of Illinois (it is a good thing computers were one-of-a-kind creations in these days, can you imagine being asked to duplicate this?)
UNIVAC By the end of the 1950's computers were no longer one-of-a-kind hand built devices owned only by universities and government research labs. Eckert and Mauchly left the University of Pennsylvania over a dispute about who owned the patents for their invention. They decided to set up their own company.  Their first product was the famous UNIVAC computer, the first commercial (that is, mass produced) computer. In the 50's, UNIVAC (a contraction of "Universal Automatic Computer") was the household word for "computer" just as "Kleenex" is for "tissue". The first UNIVAC was sold, appropriately enough, to the Census bureau. UNIVAC was also the first computer to employ magnetic tape.
The Teletype
An IBM Key Punch machine which operates like a typewriter except it produces punched cards  rather than a printed sheet of paper
The original IBM Personal Computer (PC)
The original IBM Personal Computer (PC) The original IBM Personal Computer (PC)
FIN

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

History of Computers
History of ComputersHistory of Computers
History of Computersmshihab
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computersMukul Kumar
 
first generation of computers
first generation of computersfirst generation of computers
first generation of computersGokul Tiwari
 
Evolution / history of Computer
Evolution / history of ComputerEvolution / history of Computer
Evolution / history of ComputerAAKASH KUMAR
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computersKaurKawaljeet
 
History of Computer Technology
History of Computer TechnologyHistory of Computer Technology
History of Computer TechnologyDanz Magdaraog
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computersYong Heui Cho
 
Computer stages of development
Computer stages of developmentComputer stages of development
Computer stages of developmentAmberwasim
 
Introduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computers
Introduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computersIntroduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computers
Introduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computersMuhammad Bilal
 
EVOLUTION OF COMPUTER
EVOLUTION OF COMPUTEREVOLUTION OF COMPUTER
EVOLUTION OF COMPUTERfhemrosacia
 
First generation of computer
First generation of computerFirst generation of computer
First generation of computerAvnish Khandelwal
 
Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)
Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)
Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)Shaw Cruz
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

History of computer 08
History of computer 08History of computer 08
History of computer 08
 
History of Computers
History of ComputersHistory of Computers
History of Computers
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computers
 
Computer history timeline
Computer history timelineComputer history timeline
Computer history timeline
 
History of computing
History of computingHistory of computing
History of computing
 
first generation of computers
first generation of computersfirst generation of computers
first generation of computers
 
Evolution / history of Computer
Evolution / history of ComputerEvolution / history of Computer
Evolution / history of Computer
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computers
 
Evolution of computers
Evolution  of computersEvolution  of computers
Evolution of computers
 
History of Computer Technology
History of Computer TechnologyHistory of Computer Technology
History of Computer Technology
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computers
 
History of Computer
History of ComputerHistory of Computer
History of Computer
 
Evolution & History of Computers
Evolution & History of ComputersEvolution & History of Computers
Evolution & History of Computers
 
Computer stages of development
Computer stages of developmentComputer stages of development
Computer stages of development
 
Introduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computers
Introduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computersIntroduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computers
Introduction to Computing Lecture 01 history of computers
 
HISTORY OF THE COMPUTER-CHRIS
HISTORY OF THE COMPUTER-CHRISHISTORY OF THE COMPUTER-CHRIS
HISTORY OF THE COMPUTER-CHRIS
 
EVOLUTION OF COMPUTER
EVOLUTION OF COMPUTEREVOLUTION OF COMPUTER
EVOLUTION OF COMPUTER
 
Brief history of computers
Brief history of computersBrief history of computers
Brief history of computers
 
First generation of computer
First generation of computerFirst generation of computer
First generation of computer
 
Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)
Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)
Lesson 1 history of computer (grade 1)
 

Destacado

History of computers and its types
History of computers and its typesHistory of computers and its types
History of computers and its typesSaeel Dabholkar
 
History of computer
History of computerHistory of computer
History of computeraoy_1994
 
History of computer technology
History of computer technology History of computer technology
History of computer technology shiva prasad
 
The History Of Computers
The History Of ComputersThe History Of Computers
The History Of Computerskme1011
 
Computers power point presentation
Computers power point presentationComputers power point presentation
Computers power point presentationSai Tharun
 
Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti
Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti
Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti skselatpulau
 
Timeline of the History of Computer
Timeline of the History of ComputerTimeline of the History of Computer
Timeline of the History of Computerjordonestrada25
 
Evolution and Types of the Computer
Evolution and Types of the ComputerEvolution and Types of the Computer
Evolution and Types of the ComputerNur Azlina
 
Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...
Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...
Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...Hemita Dua
 
History of computer and classification of computers
History of computer and classification of computersHistory of computer and classification of computers
History of computer and classification of computersRoopsi Srivastava
 
Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...
Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...
Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...Usama Fayyad
 
Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"
Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"
Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"Nazmul Hetfield Batchu
 

Destacado (20)

History of computer
History of computerHistory of computer
History of computer
 
History of computers and its types
History of computers and its typesHistory of computers and its types
History of computers and its types
 
History of computer
History of computerHistory of computer
History of computer
 
History of computer technology
History of computer technology History of computer technology
History of computer technology
 
The History Of Computers
The History Of ComputersThe History Of Computers
The History Of Computers
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computers
 
Slot 4 & 5: Input, Output & Storan
Slot 4 & 5: Input, Output & StoranSlot 4 & 5: Input, Output & Storan
Slot 4 & 5: Input, Output & Storan
 
Computers' History Timeline
Computers' History TimelineComputers' History Timeline
Computers' History Timeline
 
Computers power point presentation
Computers power point presentationComputers power point presentation
Computers power point presentation
 
Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti
Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti
Slot 8 perisian pengendali, aplikasi, utiliti
 
History of Computers
History of ComputersHistory of Computers
History of Computers
 
Timeline of the History of Computer
Timeline of the History of ComputerTimeline of the History of Computer
Timeline of the History of Computer
 
Chn ppt 2011 part 1
Chn ppt 2011   part 1Chn ppt 2011   part 1
Chn ppt 2011 part 1
 
Evolution and Types of the Computer
Evolution and Types of the ComputerEvolution and Types of the Computer
Evolution and Types of the Computer
 
A brief history of computers
A brief history of computersA brief history of computers
A brief history of computers
 
Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...
Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...
Early computers, history , and its types (The institute of chartered accounta...
 
Slot 1: Definisi & Sejarah Komputer
Slot 1: Definisi & Sejarah KomputerSlot 1: Definisi & Sejarah Komputer
Slot 1: Definisi & Sejarah Komputer
 
History of computer and classification of computers
History of computer and classification of computersHistory of computer and classification of computers
History of computer and classification of computers
 
Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...
Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...
Keynote talk at Financial Times Forum - BigData and Advanced Analytics at SIB...
 
Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"
Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"
Victorian Crisis in Tennyson’s "Lotos Eaters"
 

Similar a The History of Computers

Similar a The History of Computers (20)

History of computers2
History of computers2History of computers2
History of computers2
 
The Five Generations of Computers
The Five Generations of ComputersThe Five Generations of Computers
The Five Generations of Computers
 
6. Generations & types of Computer - ( CSI-321)
6. Generations & types of Computer - ( CSI-321) 6. Generations & types of Computer - ( CSI-321)
6. Generations & types of Computer - ( CSI-321)
 
History of computers_h
History of computers_hHistory of computers_h
History of computers_h
 
Computer History
Computer HistoryComputer History
Computer History
 
History of computing technology
History of computing technologyHistory of computing technology
History of computing technology
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computers
 
History of Computers ppt
History of Computers pptHistory of Computers ppt
History of Computers ppt
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computers
 
History-of-Computers (1).pdf
History-of-Computers (1).pdfHistory-of-Computers (1).pdf
History-of-Computers (1).pdf
 
History of computers 2
History of computers 2History of computers 2
History of computers 2
 
The history of computers
The history of computersThe history of computers
The history of computers
 
The history of computer
The history of computerThe history of computer
The history of computer
 
Assignment (a sel)
Assignment (a sel)Assignment (a sel)
Assignment (a sel)
 
Assignment (asel)
Assignment (asel)Assignment (asel)
Assignment (asel)
 
Assignment in T.L.E
Assignment in T.L.EAssignment in T.L.E
Assignment in T.L.E
 
A computer project work of RK SRIVASTAV
A computer project work of  RK SRIVASTAVA computer project work of  RK SRIVASTAV
A computer project work of RK SRIVASTAV
 
History of computers1
History of computers1History of computers1
History of computers1
 
Introduction to computers
Introduction to computersIntroduction to computers
Introduction to computers
 
History of computers
History of computersHistory of computers
History of computers
 

Más de Jhessie Abella RN,RM,MAN,CPSO (16)

Neonatal Jaundice NICE 2015.pptx
Neonatal Jaundice NICE 2015.pptxNeonatal Jaundice NICE 2015.pptx
Neonatal Jaundice NICE 2015.pptx
 
Effective High Performance Team Dynamics for Code Blue Team
Effective High Performance Team Dynamics for Code Blue TeamEffective High Performance Team Dynamics for Code Blue Team
Effective High Performance Team Dynamics for Code Blue Team
 
Patient Experience Measurement Tooll.pdf
Patient Experience Measurement Tooll.pdfPatient Experience Measurement Tooll.pdf
Patient Experience Measurement Tooll.pdf
 
Patient Safety and IPSG
Patient Safety and IPSGPatient Safety and IPSG
Patient Safety and IPSG
 
Research
Research Research
Research
 
CPG ADAPTATION METHODOLOGY
CPG ADAPTATION METHODOLOGYCPG ADAPTATION METHODOLOGY
CPG ADAPTATION METHODOLOGY
 
Cultural and Religion Sensitive Care
Cultural and Religion Sensitive CareCultural and Religion Sensitive Care
Cultural and Religion Sensitive Care
 
Assessing the skin
Assessing the skinAssessing the skin
Assessing the skin
 
Planning for nursing service
Planning for nursing servicePlanning for nursing service
Planning for nursing service
 
Nursing Leadership
Nursing LeadershipNursing Leadership
Nursing Leadership
 
Care of the mother, child and family (NCM 101)
Care of the mother, child and family (NCM 101)Care of the mother, child and family (NCM 101)
Care of the mother, child and family (NCM 101)
 
Conception/Obstetrics Nursing
Conception/Obstetrics NursingConception/Obstetrics Nursing
Conception/Obstetrics Nursing
 
Data Processing
Data ProcessingData Processing
Data Processing
 
Computer Basic
Computer BasicComputer Basic
Computer Basic
 
Nursing informatics
Nursing informaticsNursing informatics
Nursing informatics
 
Nursing informatics 2011
Nursing informatics 2011Nursing informatics 2011
Nursing informatics 2011
 

The History of Computers

  • 1. The History of Computers
  • 2. The FIRST COMPUTERS The first computers were people! That is, electronic computers (and the earlier mechanical computers) were given this name because they performed the work that had previously been assigned to people. "Computer" was originally a job title: it was used to describe those human beings (predominantly women) whose job it was to perform the repetitive calculations required to compute such things as navigational tables, tide charts, and planetary positions for astronomical almanacs.
  • 3. A typical computer operation back when computers were people.
  • 4. The ABACUS The abacus was an early aid for mathematical computations. Its only value is that it aids the memory of the human performing the calculation. A skilled abacus operator can work on addition and subtraction problems at the speed of a person equipped with a hand calculator (multiplication and division are slower).
  • 5. The abacus is often wrongly attributed to China. In fact, the oldest surviving abacus was used in 300 B.C. by the Babylonians. The abacus is still in use today, principally in the far east. A modern abacus consists of rings that slide over rods, but the older one pictured below dates from the time when pebbles were used for counting (the word "calculus" comes from the Latin word for pebble).
  • 6. The LOGARITHMSIn 1617 an eccentric (some say mad) Scotsman named John Napier invented logarithms, which are a technology that allows multiplication to be performed via addition. The magic ingredient is the logarithm of each operand, which was originally obtained from a printed table. But Napier also invented an alternative to tables, where the logarithm values were carved on ivory sticks which are now called Napier's Bones.
  • 7. A more Modern NAPIER’S BONE Napier's invention led directly to the slide rule, first built in England in 1632 and still in use in the 1960's by the NASA engineers of the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs which landed men on the moon
  • 8. Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) made drawings of gear-driven calculating machines but apparently never built any.
  • 9. The FIRST Gear Driven Calculating Machine The first gear-driven calculating machine to actually be built was probably the calculating clock, so named by its inventor, the German professor Wilhelm Schickard in 1623. This device got little publicity because Schickard died soon afterward in the bubonic plague.
  • 10. Pascal’s Pascaline In 1642 Blaise Pascal, at age 19, invented the Pascaline as an aid for his father who was a tax collector. Pascal built 50 of this gear-driven one-function calculator (it could only add) but couldn't sell many because of their exorbitant cost and because they really weren't that accurate (at that time it was not possible to fabricate gears with the required precision). Up until the present age when car dashboards went digital, the odometer portion of a car's speedometer used the very same mechanism as the Pascaline to increment the next wheel after each full revolution of the prior wheel. Pascal was a child prodigy. At the age of 12, he was discovered doing his version of Euclid's thirty-second proposition on the kitchen floor. Pascal went on to invent probability theory, the hydraulic press, and the syringe. Shown below is an 8 digit version of the Pascaline, and two views of a 6 digit version:
  • 11.
  • 12. The Stepped Reckoner Just a few years after Pascal, the German Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (co-inventor with Newton of calculus) managed to build a four-function (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division) calculator that he called the stepped reckoner because, instead of gears, it employed fluted drums having ten flutes arranged around their circumference in a stair-step fashion. Although the stepped reckoner employed the decimal number system (each drum had 10 flutes), Leibniz was the first to advocate use of the binary number system which is fundamental to the operation of modern computers. Leibniz is considered one of the greatest of the philosophers but he died poor and alone.
  • 14. Jacquard’s Loom In 1801 the Frenchman Joseph Marie Jacquard invented a power loom that could base its weave (and hence the design on the fabric) upon a pattern automatically read from punched wooden cards, held together in a long row by rope. Descendents of these punched cards have been in use ever since.
  • 15. By selecting particular cards for Jacquard's loom you defined the woven pattern Title
  • 16.
  • 17. Jacquard's technology was a real boon to mill owners, but put many loom operators out of work. Angry mobs smashed Jacquard looms and once attacked Jacquard himself. History is full of examples of labor unrest following technological innovation yet most studies show that, overall, technology has actually increased the number of jobs.
  • 18. The Difference Engine of CHARLES BABBAGE By 1822 the English mathematician Charles Babbage was proposing a steam driven calculating machine the size of a room, which he called the Difference Engine. This machine would be able to compute tables of numbers, such as logarithm tables. He obtained government funding for this project due to the importance of numeric tables in ocean navigation. By promoting their commercial and military navies, the British government had managed to become the earth's greatest empire. But in that time frame the British government was publishing a seven volume set of navigation tables which came with a companion volume of corrections which showed that the set had over 1000 numerical errors.
  • 19. The Difference Engine of CHARLES BABBAGE It was hoped that Babbage's machine could eliminate errors in these types of tables. But construction of Babbage's Difference Engine proved exceedingly difficult and the project soon became the most expensive government funded project up to that point in English history. Ten years later the device was still nowhere near complete, acrimony abounded between all involved, and funding dried up. The device was never finished.
  • 20. Babbage befriended Ada Byron, the daughter of the famous poet Lord Byron (Ada would later become the Countess Lady Lovelace by marriage). Though she was only 19, she was fascinated by Babbage's ideas and thru letters and meetings with Babbage she learned enough about the design of the Analytic Engine to begin fashioning programs for the still unbuilt machine. While Babbage refused to publish his knowledge for another 30 years, Ada wrote a series of "Notes" wherein she detailed sequences of instructions she had prepared for the Analytic Engine. The Analytic Engine remained unbuilt (the British government refused to get involved with this one) but Ada earned her spot in history as the first computer programmer. Ada invented the subroutine and was the first to recognize the importance of looping. Babbage himself went on to invent the modern postal system, cowcatchers on trains, and the ophthalmoscope, which is still used today to treat the eye.
  • 21. Hollerith Desk The U.S. Constitution states that a census should be taken of all U.S. citizens every 10 years in order to determine the representation of the states in Congress. While the very first census of 1790 had only required 9 months, by 1880 the U.S. population had grown so much that the count for the 1880 census took 7.5 years. Automation was clearly needed for the next census. The census bureau offered a prize for an inventor to help with the 1890 census and this prize was won by Herman Hollerith, who proposed and then successfully adopted Jacquard's punched cards for the purpose of computation
  • 22.
  • 23. Hollerith's invention, known as the Hollerith desk, consisted of a card reader which sensed the holes in the cards, a gear driven mechanism which could count (using Pascal's mechanism which we still see in car odometers), and a large wall of dial indicators (a car speedometer is a dial indicator) to display the results of the count. Hollerith's technique was successful and the 1890 census was completed in only 3 years at a savings of 5 million dollars. Hollerith built a company, the Tabulating Machine Company which, after a few buyouts, eventually became International Business Machines, known today as IBM. IBM grew rapidly and punched cards became ubiquitous.
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26.
  • 27. IBM continued to develop mechanical calculators for sale to businesses to help with financial accounting and inventory accounting. One characteristic of both financial accounting and inventory accounting is that although you need to subtract, you don't need negative numbers and you really don't have to multiply since multiplication can be accomplished via repeated addition. But the U.S. military desired a mechanical calculator more optimized for scientific computation. By World War II the U.S. had battleships that could lob shells weighing as much as a small car over distances up to 25 miles. Physicists could write the equations that described how atmospheric drag, wind, gravity, muzzle velocity, etc. would determine the trajectory of the shell. But solving such equations was extremely laborious. This was the work performed by the human computers.
  • 28. MARK I One early success was the Harvard Mark I computer which was built as a partnership between Harvard and IBM in 1944. This was the first programmable digital computer made in the U.S. But it was not a purely electronic computer. Instead the Mark I was constructed out of switches, relays, rotating shafts, and clutches. The machine weighed 5 tons, incorporated 500 miles of wire, was 8 feet tall and 51 feet long, and had a 50 ft rotating shaft running its length, turned by a 5 horsepower electric motor
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31. One of the primary programmers for the Mark I was a woman, Grace Hopper. Hopper found the first computer "bug": a dead moth that had gotten into the Mark I and whose wings were blocking the reading of the holes in the paper tape. The word "bug" had been used to describe a defect since at least 1889 but Hopper is credited with coining the word "debugging" to describe the work to eliminate program faults.
  • 32.
  • 33. The FIRST PERSONAL COMPUTER A home computer of 1976 such as this Apple I which sold for only $600:
  • 34. Computers had been incredibly expensive because they required so much hand assembly, such as the wiring seen in this  CDC 7600:
  • 35. The Microelectronic Revolution An integrated circuit ("silicon chip")
  • 36. The Atanasoff-Berry Computer One of the earliest attempts to build an all-electronic (that is, no gears, cams, belts, shafts, etc.) digital computer occurred in 1937 by J. V. Atanasoff, a professor of physics and mathematics at Iowa State University. By 1941 he and his graduate student, Clifford Berry, had succeeded in building a machine that could solve 29 simultaneous equations with 29 unknowns. This machine was the first to store data as a charge on a capacitor, which is how today's computers store information in their main memory (DRAM or dynamic RAM). As far as its inventors were aware, it was also the first to employ binary arithmetic. However, the machine was not programmable, it lacked a conditional branch, its design was appropriate for only one type of mathematical problem, and it was not further pursued after World War II. It's inventors didn't even bother to preserve the machine and it was dismantled by those who moved into the room where it lay abandoned.
  • 37.
  • 38. The Colossus Another candidate for granddaddy of the modern computer was Colossus, built during World War II by Britain for the purpose of breaking the cryptographic codes used by Germany. Britain led the world in designing and building electronic machines dedicated to code breaking, and was routinely able to read coded Germany radio transmissions. But Colossus was definitely not a general purpose, reprogrammable machine.
  • 39.
  • 40. The Harvard Mark I, the Atanasoff-Berry computer, and the British Colossus all made important contributions. American and British computer pioneers were still arguing over who was first to do what
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43. Forefather of Today's all-Electronic Digital Computers
  • 44. Forefather of Today's all-Electronic Digital Computers The title of forefather of today's all-electronic digital computers is usually awarded to ENIAC, which stood for Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator. ENIAC was built at the University of Pennsylvania between 1943 and 1945 by two professors, John Mauchly and the 24 year old J. Presper Eckert, who got funding from the war department after promising they could build a machine that would replace all the "computers", meaning the women who were employed calculating the firing tables for the army's artillery guns.
  • 45. Forefather of Today's all-Electronic Digital Computers ENIAC filled a 20 by 40 foot room, weighed 30 tons, and used more than 18,000 vacuum tubes. Like the Mark I, ENIAC employed paper card readers obtained from IBM (these were a regular product for IBM, as they were a long established part of business accounting machines, IBM's forte). When operating, the ENIAC was silent but you knew it was on as the 18,000 vacuum tubes each generated waste heat like a light bulb and all this heat (174,000 watts of heat) meant that the computer could only be operated in a specially designed room with its own heavy duty air conditioning system.
  • 46. "Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator" (note that it wasn't even given the name of computer since "computers" were people)
  • 47.
  • 49.
  • 50. ILLIAC After ENIAC and EDVAC came other computers with humorous names such as ILLIAC, JOHNNIAC, and, of course, MANIAC. ILLIAC was built at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana
  • 51. ILLIAC II built at the University of Illinois (it is a good thing computers were one-of-a-kind creations in these days, can you imagine being asked to duplicate this?)
  • 52. UNIVAC By the end of the 1950's computers were no longer one-of-a-kind hand built devices owned only by universities and government research labs. Eckert and Mauchly left the University of Pennsylvania over a dispute about who owned the patents for their invention. They decided to set up their own company. Their first product was the famous UNIVAC computer, the first commercial (that is, mass produced) computer. In the 50's, UNIVAC (a contraction of "Universal Automatic Computer") was the household word for "computer" just as "Kleenex" is for "tissue". The first UNIVAC was sold, appropriately enough, to the Census bureau. UNIVAC was also the first computer to employ magnetic tape.
  • 53.
  • 55. An IBM Key Punch machine which operates like a typewriter except it produces punched cards rather than a printed sheet of paper
  • 56. The original IBM Personal Computer (PC)
  • 57. The original IBM Personal Computer (PC) The original IBM Personal Computer (PC)
  • 58.
  • 59.
  • 60. FIN