COMPUTING DEVICES II, FROM 20TH CENTURY TO DATE
COMPUTING
DEVICES II, FROM 20TH CENTURY TO DATE
Computing devices from the 20th
century to date includes:
ENIAC
This means Electronic numerical integrator and
calculator. ENIAC was built at the University
of Pennsylvania between
1943 and 1945 by two professors John Mauchly and prosper Eckert. T. who got
funding from the war department after would replace all the “computers”
(the woman who were employed to calculate the firing tables for the army’s artillery guns.) ENIAC filled a 20 by 40 foot room, weighed 30 tons, and used more than 18,000 vacuum tubes 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.
(the woman who were employed to calculate the firing tables for the army’s artillery guns.) ENIAC filled a 20 by 40 foot room, weighed 30 tons, and used more than 18,000 vacuum tubes 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.
EDVAC
This means Electronic Discrete variable
Automatic computer.
Eckert and Manchly next teamed up with the mathematician John von
Neumann to design EDVAC, which pioneered the stored program. Because he was the
first to publish a description of this new computer. Von Neumann is often
wrongly credited with the realization that the sequence of computation steps could
be represented electronically just as the data was. But this major breakthrough
was found in Eckert’s notes long before he ever started working with von
Neumann.
UNIVAC
This means universal Automatic computer. By
the end of the 1950’s, computers were no longer one-of-a-kind hand built
devices owned 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 (that is, mass
produced) computer. UNIVAC was also the first computer to employ magnetic tape.
PERSONAL COMPUTERS (PC)
Personal Computers came in
varieties such as desktop and tower units, laptops, note book, PDAS and so on.
In this sense, the term “desktop” refers specifically to a horizontally
oriented case placed on to save space on the desk.
The first “personal computer” was the sphere 1 computer, created
in Bountiful, Utah in 1975 by computer pioneer
Michael D. wise (1949-2002). A first, sphere 1 was sold as a kit, but was later
sold as fully assembled PC, including a keyboard, a number pad, and a monitor.
PCS then were generally expensive specialized computers sold for business or
scientific uses.
The introduction of the
microprocessor, a single chip with all the circuitry that formerly occupied
large cabinets, led to the proliferation of personal computers after 1975.
Early personal computers generally called microcomputers were
sold in kit form and in limited volumes, and were of interest mostly to
hobbyists and technicians. Minimal programming was done with toggle switches to
enter instructions, and output was provided by front panel lamps. Practical use
required peripherals such as keyboards, computer terminals, disk drives and
printers.
Micral N was the earliest
commercial, non-kit microcomputer based on a microprocessor, the Intel 8008. It
was built starting in 1972 and about 90,000 units were sold. In 1976, Steve
Jobs and steve wozniak sold the Apple 1 computer circutboard, which was fully
prepared and contained about 30 chips. The first successfully mass marketed
personal computer was the commodore PET introduced in Tannery 1977, which bore
a striking resemblance to sphere 1 of two years earlier. It was soon followed
by the TRS-so from Radio shack and the popular Apple II.
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