Introductio to Informatic
(par II)
n Lectur 6: Histor of Compute
s
e
rs
Reading unti no
Lecture
notes l
s
w
Posted online @
http://informatics.indiana.edu/rocha/i101
The Nature of Information
Technology
@ infoport and web
From course package
Von Baeyer, H.C. [2004].
Information:
Language
of Science. The
Harvard University Press.
Chapters 1, 4 (pages 1-12)
New
From Andy Clarks book "Natural-Born Cyborgs
Chapters 2 and 6 (pages 19 67)
Assignme Situatio
n
nt
Labs
La 1: Blogs
Pastb
2: Basic HTML
La
b 3: Advanced HTML:
Cascading
La Lab 4
Next:
More b
HTML and CSS
Assignments
Individual
First installment
Midterm Exam
Styl Sheet
e
s
Charle Babbag (179 1 71)
s Analytical
e Engine1
8
Working with Ada Lovelace
(daughter of Lord Byron) designed
what was to have been a generalpurpose mechanical digital computer.
With a memory store and a central
processing unit (or mill) and would have been
able to select from among alternative actions
consequent upon the outcome of
its previous actions
Conditional branching: Choice, information
Programmed with instructions
contained on punched cards
Herman Hollerith (1860Devised a system of
encoding data on cards through a
1929)
series of punched holes.
Hollerith's machine, used in the 1890 U.S. census, "read" the cards
by passing them through electrical contacts. Closed circuits, which
indicated hole positions, could then be selected and counted.
His Tabulating Machine Company (1896) was a predecessor to the
International Business Machines Corporation (IBM)
Reduced reading errors, work flow was increased, and,
more important, stacks of punched cards could be
used
as
an accessible memory store of almost unlimited
capacity
Memory Punc Car
: Binary h
d
Representation
Holes denote 1s
pe colum
With 8 possibl
holes permissible
e
r n
28 = 25 number
Alan Turing (1912-1954)
In 1935, at Cambridge University, Turing
invented the principle of the modern
computer: Universal Turing Machine.
abstract digital computing machine consisting
of a limitless memory and a scanner that
moves back and forth through the memory,
symbol by symbol, reading what it finds and
writing further symbols (Turing [1936]).
The actions of the scanner are dictated by a
program of instructions that is stored in the
memory in the form of symbols.
During the Second World War, Turing was a
leading cryptanalyst at the Government Code
and Cypher School, Bletchley Park.
Breaking of the German code ENIGMA
Prosecuted for homosexuality: forced to
undergo
ENIAC (1945)
First fully functioning electronic digital computer to
be built in the U.S.
Electrical Numerical Integrator and Computer
University of Pennsylvania, for the Army Ordnance
Department, by J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly.
calculation
Far from general-purpose: The primary function
was
of tables used in aiming artillery.
ENIAC was not a stored-program computer, and setting it up for
a new job involved reconfiguring the machine by means of plugs
and switches.
Used decimal digits instead of binary ones
Nearly 18,000 vacuum tubes for switching.
Storage of all those vacuum tubes and the machinery required to
keep the cool took up over 167 square meters (1800 square feet) of
floor space.
invented by American physicist Lee De Forest in 1906.
worked by using large amounts of electricity to heat a filament
inside the tube. the presence of current represented a one.
punched-card input and output
John Von Neumann (1903von Neumann1957)
emphasized the importance of the
stored-program concept for electronic
computing,
including the possibility of allowing the machine to
modify its own program in useful ways while running
Lead the ENIAC group towards an electronic
storedprogram
general-purpose
computer,
the program digital
Von
Neumann
made the concept digital
of a high-speed
storedand public
computer widely
known through his writings
EDVAC
addresses:
von Neumann architecture: The separation of storage
from the
processing unit.
Prolific scientist
Father of game theory, cellular automata, artificial life
Theoretical model of evolution
Cybernetics, Artificial Intelligence
See book: Aspray, William. 1990. John von Neuman and the
Origins of Modern Computing. Cambride, Mass.: MIT Press.
Luis M.Rocha and Santiago
Schnell
SemiTransistor
conductor
s Walter Houser
Invented by John Bardeen,
Brattain,
and William Bradford Shockley
at Bell Laboratories in December 1947
awarded the Nobel Prize in physics in 1956.
Function as switches
A device for making or breaking an electric circuit
Also for amplification in analog devices
For choosing between several states
Between
on and off, 1
or 0
Semiconductor
device
logic gates
Allows
the construction
silicon, of
principally
germanium
and gallium arsenide.
Better than vacuum tubes
Smaller size, Highly automated manufacture, cost,
operating voltage, Absence of a heater Lower Lower
power
Lower
dissipation
Smallest
Transistor
etc.
Intel 2007: 45 nanometres (billionths of a metre) wide
Luis M.Rocha and Santiago
Schnell
Fun facts
Penryn
about
:
transist
billion nanometers (nm) in one
or1meter
Intels
45nm
A nail = 20 million nm
A meter is approximately 3
Ragweed pollen =
A
human
hair = 90,000nm
feet.1947 original transistor could be held
20,000nm
The
hand,
while hundreds of Intels ne w 45nm transistor
in your
Bacteria = 2,000nm
can fit on the surface of asingle Jred
blood cell.
Intel 45nm transistor =
If a house shrunk at the
J same pace transistors
'
45nm
have,
you would not be able. to see a house without
a
microscope.
To see the 45nm transistor, you need a
same
rate, a new car today would cost about
very advanced
1
cent.
microscope.
2,000
fit acros
theabout
width
of
a human hair.
The price
willl sbe
1 millionth
the average
l
I
.. h on
30
million
theand
he adapproximate
of a pin
It
can
switconto
30 billio
price
J
times
a
of
in 1968.
lyi If car prices0 had
n fallen
off a transistor
second
A beam of light
less than a tenth of an
at
the
during"' thI time it takes
a 45nm transistor to
travels
inch
switch on
e
'
and off.1 1
Rhinovirus = 20nm
Silicon atom = 0.24nm
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Luis M.Rocha and Santiago
Schnell
Integrate Circuit
dFirst conceived Geoffrey
s
W.A. Dummer
Royal Radar Establishment of the British Ministry of Defense in
1952.
First manufactured independently by two scientists
Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments (Germanium) on February 6,
1958
Robert Noyce of Fairchild Semiconductor (Silicon) on April 25,
1961.
Thin chip consisting of at least two
interconnected
semiconductor transistors, as well as passive
components like resistors.
Modern-day chips are of size 1 cm2 or smaller, and
contain
millions of interconnected devices.
Allowed the placement of many transistors in a small area
Typical use as microprocessors
Central Processing Unit (CPU)
part of a computer that interprets and carries out the instructions
Integrate Circuit
d
s
Luis M.Rocha and Santiago
Schnell
Moores Law
number of transistors on an integrated
circuit for minimum component
doubles everycost
24 months
density of
transistor is the lowest
transistors
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Th Firs Person Comput
e In 1971,
t Intelalreleased the first
er
microprocessor.
Able to process four bits of data at a
time!
The Altair 8800 (1975)
Telementry
(MITS) sold
by and
a company
calledSystems
Micro
$397
for
Instrumentation
Came as a kit for assembly who had
to to write software for the machine
in machine code!
256 byte memory --about the size of
a paragraph
Microsoft
Was born to create a BASIC compiler
for the
Altair
Beginners All-purpose Symbolic
Instruction
Code
Luis M.Rocha and Santiago
Schnell
PC Galore
Apple IIs(1977)!
Audio cassette interface
BASIC programming language
Display of 24 lines by 40
columns upper-case-only text
4100 character memory
$1298.
of
TRS-80 (1977)
Tandy Radio Shack
64,000 character memory
disk drive to store
programs data on.
an
d
IBM (PC) 5150
(1981)
modular design
16,000 character
memory
$1265.
Luis M.Rocha and Santiago
Schnell
Sinclair/Tim
ex
19811982
ZX81
8-16K
Spectrum
48K
graphic user
System (NLS)
al On-Line interface
(GUI)
(1960s)
Doug Engelbart's
Augmentation of
Human Intellect project @ Stanford
Research Institute
pioneer of human-computer interaction
also developed hypertext
Incorporated a mouse-driven
cursor
and multiple windows.
WIMP (windows, icons, menus and
pointers)
See his demo
http://sloan.stanford.edu/MouseSite/19
68Demo.html
XEROX PARC
Xerox Alto (1973)
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graphic use interfac (GUI)
al Macintosh
r
e(1984)
Steve Jobs adapted the idea from
Xerox
PARC
commerci
$2,49
Introduced
with
a famous super bowl
al http://www.uriah.com/apple5
qt/1984.html
Directed by Ridley Scott (Blade Runner)
Characteristics
graphical user interface, icons, a
desktop, etc.
The use of a mouse or other pointing
device in personal computing
The "double click" and "click-and-drag"
behaviors to perform actions with a
pointing
Luis M.Rocha and Santiago
device
Schnell
Microsof Window
s (1985)
tWindows 1.0
Running on MS-DOS (operative system)
http://www.infosatellite.com/news/2001/10/a251
001windowshistory_screenshots.
html
Fro
m
Google
Calendar more
CreateGmail
Event
th PC to Informatio Factorie
e
n
s
The Internet Cloud
@gmail.com
Sign out
IHli
Settings I
!::!f)Q I
Bulk of computing and
GC2dar8B
storage moving
E
to Information Factories
Huge centralized computers
comprised
of tens
thousands
of servers
Aoffuture
with
computer
Quick Add
April 2006
W
Th
Server
Farms
decentralized
Pee
to Pee Networks
Is the
r desktop
r dead?
?
s?
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.10/cloudwar
e.html
Possibl Exa Question
e
m
s
What is informatics?
What is the difference between an index and an
symbol?
Examples of Analogue vs. Digital Information?
How does Information Technology relate to
semiotics?
Transparent vs Opaque Technology?
Describe two computing devices used before the XX
century.
What is a GUI?
W
hich
d computer first featured the mouse and
the
esktop metaphor GUI?