EVOLUTION OF ICT
Mechanical Period
1450-1840; development of machines to enhance calculating speed; Pascaline and Analytical Engine
Electromechanical Period
1840-1940; electricity for information handling and transfer; 1st single-circuit telegraph and telephone
Electronic Period
1940-present; gave rise to solid-state devices
Analytical Engine
1st programmable mechanical computer; Ran off of punched cards; Created by English mathematician and computer pioneer Charles Babbage, but never completed by him.
Pre-Mechanical Period
3000 BCE- 1450 AD; humans started to communicate; petroglyphs, papers, books and libraries were born, humans started using numerical systems, abacus
telegraph
A device that used electrical signals to send messages quickly over long distances. Invented by Samuel Morse and gave rise to the Morse Code
Graphical User Interface (GUI)
Allows users to navigate other computers or devices
telephone
Converting sound into an electrical signal via a liquid transmitter
solid state devices
ENIAC, Olivetti Programma 101 (1965), IBM 5150 (1981), Xerox 8010
Charles Bourseul
Frenchman who invented telephone-like devices on 1854
ICT
Information and Communication Technology
Pascaline
Invented by French Mathematician-Philosopher Blaise Pascal, first ever calculating machine to be produced in quantities and is actually used; first business calculator
Alexander Graham Bell
Invented the telephone, won the first US patent for the device on 1876. He began his research in 1874 and had financial backers who gave him the best business plan for bringing it to market.
Antonio Meucci
Inventor of the telephone in 1849
Four Main Periods of ICT
Pre-Mechanical, Mechanical, Electromechanical, Electronic Period
Alfred Vall
Samuel Morse's assistant whom he sent the first message to
Analytical Engine
The Father of computer
abacus
a calculator that performs arithmetic functions by manually sliding counters on rods or in grooves, first calculating device
Morse Code
a system of dots and dashes that represent the alphabet.
Solid State Devices (SSD)
also known as electronic devices
IBM 5150 (1981)
created by a team if engineers led by Don Estridge, the first desktop computer with monitor and uses Command Line Interface
petroglyphs
drawings, symbols carved on rocks
Xerox 8010
first GUI (Graphical User Interface)
ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer)
first electronic general-purpose computer that can solve full-range of computing problems, originally designed for the US Army for artillery
"what hath God wrought!"
first sent message through the telegraph
Olivetti Programma 101 (1965)
invented by Pier Giorgio Perotto, world's first personal computer, first desktop computer without monitor
Command Line Interface (CLI)
used to operate softwares and operating systems