History of Computer
Fourth Generation
1974 IBM single chip processor, microprocessor/ microcomputer. Miniaturization still in this generation today.
First Generation Computer
characterized by their use of vacuum tubes to store individual bits of data
ENIAC
the first general-purpose electronic computer
Tabulating Machine
-part of Hollerith's US Census -400 cards/ minute, 12 bits of info from each card -IBM aided Nazi regime effort to allocate and exterminate Jewish population
abacus
An ancient Chinese counting device that used rods on which were mounted movable counters
Herman Hollerith (1860-1929)
Applied the concept of representing information as holes in paper cards to speed up the tabulation process in the 1890 US census.
Second Generation Computer
used transistors instead of vacuum tubes
ENIAC (1946)
ENIAC - the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer. World's first electronic, large scale, general-purpose computer, built by J. Presper Eckert, Jr. and John W. Mauchly, and activated at the University of Pennsylvania. The ENIAC was a 30 ton machine that measured 50 x 30 feet. It contained 19,000 vacuum tubes, 6000 switches, and could add 5,000 numbers in a second, a remarkable accomplishment at the time.
Pascaline (1642)
Set of gears, similar to clock Only performed addition
Fifth Generation Computer
Called supercomputers. Has CPU's. Characterized by high speed and efficiency, high storage. Ex. AI or Robotics
Charles Babbage
He is known as the "Father of Computers." He developed the Difference Engine and the Analytical Engine. These two machines were powered by steam to move the punch cards and operate the gears. His ideas were later used to design calculators and computers.
Blaise Pascal
He was a mathematician who developed the "Pascaline." This was the first mechanical adding machine. The Pascaline was a wooden box that could add and subtract by using a series of gears and wheels.
UNIVAC
Universal Automatic Computer; first commercially successful electronic digital computer.
Third Generation Computer
integrated circuits
Analytical Engine
1st mechanical computer. Ran off of punched cards. Created by Charles Babbage, but never completed by him.