Evolution of Computer
Evolution of Computer
SEMINAR REPORT
ON
Evolution of Computer
SUBMITTED BY:
Arti Gajbhar
SUBMITTED TO:
Computers have been around a lot longer than many people might imagine.
The word "computer" has changed meaning over decades, but the
electronic computer that we think of in modern times developed throughout
the second half of the 20th century. Its popularity as a household item
surged in the 1980s following the arrival of operating systems by Apple and
Microsoft that mixed graphics and text, replacing the text-only systems of
the 1970s. By the 1990s, computers incorporated enhanced communication
and multimedia applications and became an indispensable part of daily life
for millions of people.
Early Computing
The original definition of the word "computer" was a person who made
calculations. This definition goes back to the 1600s and extends midway
through the 20th century, when the term "computer" began to refer to a
machine. The computer is based on the same concept as the abacus,
which goes back many centuries. Technology made a giant leap with
punched cards, introduced by Joseph-Marie Masquard in 1801. It's
interesting that an early use of this system involved music, in which piano
rolls assigned actions to notes on a piano, leading to the "player piano" in
the 1870s. In 1835 Charles Babbage combined punched cards with a
steam engine to invent what he called an "analytical engine."
In the beginning, when the task was simply counting or adding, people
used either their fingers or pebbles along lines in the sand in order to
simply the process of counting, people in Asia minor built a counting
device called ABACUS, the device allowed users to do calculations using a
system of sliding beads arranged on a rack.
With the passage of time, many computing devices such as Napier bones
and slide rule were invented. It took many centuries for the advancement
in computing devices. In 1642, a French mathematician, Blaise Pascal
invented the first functional automatic calculator. The brass rectangular
box also called Pascaline, used eight movable dials to add sums and eight
figures only.
The basic design of the engine included input devices in the form of
perforated cards containing operating system as a store for memory of
1,000 numbers up to 50 decimal digits long. It also contained a controlled
unit that allowed processing instructions at any sequence, output device
to produce printed results. Babbage borrowed the idea of punch cards to
encode the instructions in the machine from the Joseph Marie jacquards
loom
In 1889, Herman Hollerith, worked for us. Census Bureau, also applied the
Jacquards Loom concept to computing. The start of world war-2
substantial need for computers capacity, especially for military purposes.
One early success was mark-1, which was by IBM Andhardvard Huiken in
1944. In 1946, John Eckert and johny Mauchly of Moore School of
engineering, developed the ENIAC (Electronic Numeric Integrator and
Calculator). Later, EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic
Computer). It was first electronic computer developed by John Von
Neumann. In 1949, Maurice developed EDSAC(Electronic Delay Storage
Automatic Calculator). Eckert-Mauchly Corporation manufactured UNIVAC
(Universal Automatic computer) in 1951. In 1960, fastest computer to
access the time of 1 micro second and a total capacity of 100,000,000
words was developed. During 1970s, the trend for cheaper computers
made possible by integrated chips (IC) and Microprocessors. Today using
VLSI (Very Large Scale Integrated Circuits), which are programmed using
ROM is made. It could handle 32 bits at a time, and can process 4,000,000
instructions at a time.
Computer Generations
The company IBM grew out of the invention of the tabulator, crafted by
Herman Hollerith in the late 1880s. This was the first use of punched
cards representing data as opposed to punched cards automating a
mechanical function like a player piano. The information processing world
through the 1950s was based on a combination of punched cards, the
tabulator and key punch machines. The first calculators appeared in the
1930s. Analog machines began to get replaced by the digital concept of
zeroes and ones throughout the World War II era. The first computer made
for the masses was UNIVAC, made by Remington Rand in 1951. IBM
introduced its mainframe computer the following year.
Computer Integration
Early Remington computers sold at over a million dollars per machine, but
IBM made smaller, more affordable machines that became popular. In
1954 IBM developed FORTRAN, one of the original computer
programming languages, based heavily on mathematics. During the same
decade, the developments of the transistor, integrated circuits and
microprogramming led the way for reducing computer size. Meanwhile,
CPUs increased computer processing speed and memory improved data
storage. The arrival of microprocessors introduced by Texas Instruments
and Intel in the early 1970s paved the way for miniaturized yet more
powerful computers.
Rise of the PC
Multimedia Culture