Computing hardware has been an important component of the process of calculation and
computer data storage since it became useful for numerical values to be processed and shared. The earliest computing hardware was probably some form of
tally stick; later record keeping aids include
Phoenician clay shapes which represented counts of items, probably livestock or grains, in containers. Something similar is found in early Minoan excavations. These seem to have been used by the
merchants,
accountants, and government officials of the time.
Devices to aid computation have changed from simple recording and counting devices to the
abacus, the
slide rule,
analog computers, and more recent electronic
computers. Even today, an experienced
abacus user using a device hundreds of years old can sometimes complete basic calculations more quickly than an unskilled person using an electronic
calculator — though for more complex calculations, computers out-perform even the most skilled human. Some calculations that were previously not feasible to complete within a human lifetime can now be accomplished by computer.
This article covers major developments in the history of computing hardware, and attempts to put them in context. For a detailed timeline of events, see the
computing timeline article. The
history of computing article is a related overview and treats methods intended for pen and paper, with or without the aid of tables.
Earliest devices
Humanity has used devices to aid in computation for millennia. One example is a device for establishing the checkered cloths of the counting houses served as simple for enumerating stacks of coins, by height. A more arithmetic-oriented machine is the
abacus. The earliest form of abacus, the dust abacus, is thought to have been invented in
Babylonia. The
ancient Egyptian bead and wire abacus dates from 500 BC.
A number of
analog computers were constructed in
ancient and
medieval times to perform astronomical calculations. These include the
Antikythera mechanism from
ancient Greece (c. 150-100 BC); the
Planisphere; some of the inventions of Abū Rayhān al-Bīrūnī (c. 1000 AD); the
Equatorium of Abū Ishāq Ibrāhīm al-Zarqālī (c. 1015 AD); and the astronomical analog computers of other
medieval Muslim astronomers and
engineers.
John Napier (1550–1617) noted that
multiplication and
division of numbers can be performed by
addition and
subtraction, respectively, of
logarithms of those numbers. While producing the first logarithmic tables Napier needed to perform many multiplications, and it was at this point that he designed
Napier's bones, an abacus-like device used for multiplication and division.
Since
real numbers can be represented as
distances or
intervals on a line, the
slide rule was invented in the 1620s to allow multiplication and division operations to be carried out significantly faster than was previously possible. Slide rules were used by generations of engineers and other mathematically inclined professional workers, until the invention of the
pocket calculator. The engineers in the
Apollo program to send a man to the
moon made many of their calculations on slide rules, which were accurate to 3 or 4
significant figures.
In 1623,
Wilhelm Schickard built the first digital mechanical calculator and thus became the father of the computing era. Since his machine used techniques such as cogs and gears first developed for clocks, it was also called a 'calculating clock'. It was put to practical use by his friend
Johannes Kepler, who revolutionized astronomy.
An original calculator by
Pascal (1640) is preserved in the
Zwinger Museum. Machines by
Blaise Pascal (the
Pascaline, 1642), and
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (1671) followed. Around 1820,
Charles Xavier Thomas created the first successful, mass-produced mechanical calculator, the Thomas Arithmometer, that could add, subtract, multiply, and divide. It was mainly based on Leibniz's work. Mechanical calculators, like the base-ten
addiator, the
comptometer, the
Monroe, the
Curta and the Addo-X remained in use until the 1970s.
Leibniz also described the
binary numeral system, a central ingredient of all modern computers. However, up to the 1940s, many subsequent designs (including
Charles Babbage's machines of the 1800s and even
ENIAC of 1945) were based on the harder-to-implement decimal system.
1801: punched card technology


Punched card system of a music machine. Also referred to as
Book music, a one-stop European medium for organs


Punched card system of a 19th Century loom
As early as
1725 Basile Bouchon used a perforated paper loop in a loom to establish the pattern to be reproduced on cloth, and in
1726 his co-worker Jean-Baptiste Falcon improved on his design by using perforated paper cards attached to one another for efficiency in adapting and changing the program. The Bouchon-Falcon loom was semi-automatic and required manual feed of the program.
In
1801,
Joseph-Marie Jacquard developed a
loom in which the pattern being woven was controlled by
punched cards. The series of cards could be changed without changing the mechanical design of the loom. This was a landmark point in programmability.
In 1833,
Charles Babbage moved on from developing his
difference engine to developing a more complete design, the
analytical engine, which would draw directly on Jacquard's punched cards for its programming.
[1].
In 1835
Charles Babbage described his
analytical engine. It was the plan of a general-purpose programmable computer, employing punch cards for input and a steam engine for power. One crucial invention was to use gears for the function served by the beads of an abacus. In a real sense, computers all contain automatic abacuses (technically called the
arithmetic logic unit or
floating-point unit).
His initial idea was to use punch-cards to control a machine that could calculate and print logarithmic tables with huge precision (a specific purpose machine). Babbage's idea soon developed into a general-purpose programmable computer, his analytical engine.
While his design was sound and the plans were probably correct, or at least
debuggable, the project was slowed by various problems. Babbage was a difficult man to work with and argued with anyone who didn't respect his ideas. All the parts for his machine had to be made by hand. Small errors in each item can sometimes sum up to large discrepancies in a machine with thousands of parts, which required these parts to be much better than the usual tolerances needed at the time. The project dissolved in disputes with the artisan who built parts and was ended with the depletion of government funding.
Ada Lovelace,
Lord Byron's daughter, translated and added notes to the "
Sketch of the Analytical Engine" by
Federico Luigi, Conte Menabrea. She has become closely associated with Babbage. Some claim she is the world's first computer programmer, however this claim and the value of her other contributions are disputed by many.
A reconstruction of the
Difference Engine II, an earlier, more limited design, has been operational since 1991 at the
London Science Museum. With a few trivial changes, it works as Babbage designed it and shows that Babbage was right in theory.
The museum used computer-operated machine tools to construct the necessary parts, following tolerances which a machinist of the period would have been able to achieve. Some feel that the technology of the time was unable to produce parts of sufficient precision, though this appears to be false. The failure of Babbage to complete the engine can be chiefly attributed to difficulties not only related to politics and financing, but also to his desire to develop an increasingly sophisticated computer. Today, many in the computer field term this sort of obsession
creeping featuritis.
In 1890, the
United States Census Bureau used
punched cards, sorting machines, and
tabulating machines designed by
Herman Hollerith, to handle the flood of data from the decennial
census mandated by the
Constitution. Hollerith's company eventually became the core of
IBM. IBM developed punched card technology into a powerful tool for business data-processing and produced an extensive line of specialized
unit record equipment. By 1950, the IBM card had become ubiquitous in industry and government. The warning printed on most cards intended for circulation as documents (checks, for example), "Do not fold,
spindle or mutilate," became a motto for the post-
World War II era.
[1]
Following in the footsteps of Babbage, although unaware of his earlier work, was
Percy Ludgate, an accountant from Dublin, Ireland. He independently designed a programmable mechanical computer, which he described in a work that was published in 1909.
Leslie Comrie's articles on punched card methods and
W.J. Eckert's publication of
Punched Card Methods in Scientific Computation in 1940, described techniques which were sufficiently advanced to solve differential equations, perform multiplication and division using floating point representations, all on punched cards and
unit record machines. The
Thomas J. Watson Astronomical Computing Bureau,
Columbia University performed astronomical calculations representing the state of the art in
computing.
In many computer installations, punched cards were used until (and after) the end of the 1970s. For example, science and engineering students at many universities around the world would submit their programming assignments to the local computer centre in the form of a stack of cards, one card per program line, and then had to wait for the program to be queued for processing, compiled, and executed. In due course a printout of any results, marked with the submitter's identification, would be placed in an output tray outside the computer center. In many cases these results would comprise solely a printout of error messages regarding program syntax
etc., necessitating another
edit-compile-run cycle.
[2]
Punched cards are still used and manufactured to this day, and their distinctive dimensions (and 80-column capacity) can still be recognized in forms, records, and programs around the world.
1930s–1960s: desktop calculators
By the 1900s earlier mechanical calculators, cash registers, accounting machines, and so on were redesigned to use electric motors, with gear position as the representation for the state of a variable. Companies like
Friden,
Marchant Calculator and
Monroe made desktop mechanical
calculators from the 1930s that could add, subtract, multiply and divide. The word "computer" was a job title assigned to people who used these calculators to perform mathematical calculations. During the
Manhattan project, future Nobel laureate
Richard Feynman was the supervisor of the roomful of
human computers, many of them women mathematicians, who understood the
differential equations which were being solved for the war effort. Even the renowned Stanisław Ulam was pressed into service to translate the mathematics into computable approximations for the
hydrogen bomb, after the war.
In 1948, the
Curta was introduced. This was a small, portable, mechanical calculator that was about the size of a pepper grinder. Over time, during the 1950s and 1960s a variety of different brands of mechanical calculator appeared on the market.
The first all-electronic desktop calculator was the British
ANITA Mk.VII, which used a
Nixie tube display and 177 subminiature
thyratron tubes. In June 1963, Friden introduced the four-function EC-130. It had an all-transistor design, 13-digit capacity on a 5-inch
CRT, and introduced reverse Polish notation (
RPN) to the calculator market at a price of $2200. The model EC-132 added square root and reciprocal functions. In 1965,
Wang Laboratories produced the LOCI-2, a 10-digit transistorized desktop calculator that used a Nixie tube display and could compute
logarithms.
With development of the
integrated circuits and
microprocessors, the expensive, large calculators were replaced with smaller electronic devices.
Advanced analog computers


Cambridge differential analyzer, 1938
Before
World War II, mechanical and electrical
analog computers were considered the "state of the art", and many thought they were the future of computing. Analog computers use continuously varying amounts of physical quantities, such as voltages or currents, or the rotational speed of shafts, to represent the quantities being processed. An ingenious example of such a machine was the
water integrator built in 1928; an electrical example is the
Mallock machine built in 1941. Unlike modern digital computers, analog computers are not very flexible, and need to be reconfigured (i.e., reprogrammed) manually to switch them from working on one problem to another. Analog computers had an advantage over early digital computers in that they could be used to solve complex problems while the earliest attempts at digital computers were quite limited. But as digital computers have become faster and used larger memory (e.g.,
RAM or internal store), they have almost entirely displaced analog computers, and
computer programming, or
coding has arisen as another human profession.
Since computers were rare in this era, the solutions were often
hard-coded into paper forms such as
graphs and
nomograms, which could then allow analog solutions to problems, such as the distribution of pressures and temperatures in a heating system.
Some of the most widely deployed analog computers included devices for aiming weapons, such as the
Norden bombsight and
Fire-control systems for naval vessels. Some of these stayed in use for decades after WWII. One example is the
Mark I Fire Control Computer, deployed by the
United States Navy on a variety of ships from
destroyers to
battleships.
Other examples included the
Heathkit EC-1, and the hydraulic
MONIAC Computer.
The art of analog computing reached its zenith with the
differential analyzer, invented in 1876 by
James Thomson and built by H. W. Nieman and
Vannevar Bush at
MIT starting in
1927. Fewer than a dozen of these devices were ever built; the most powerful was constructed at the
University of Pennsylvania's
Moore School of Electrical Engineering, where the
ENIAC was built. Digital electronic computers like the ENIAC spelled the end for most analog computing machines, but hybrid analog computers, controlled by digital electronics, remained in substantial use into the 1950s and 1960s, and later in some specialized applications.
Early digital computers
The era of modern computing began with a flurry of development before and during
World War II, as
electronic circuits,
relays,
capacitors, and
vacuum tubes replaced mechanical equivalents and digital calculations replaced analog calculations. Machines such as the Atanasoff–Berry Computer, the
Z3, the
Colossus, and
ENIAC were built by hand using circuits containing relays or valves (vacuum tubes), and often used
punched cards or
punched paper tape for input and as the main (non-volatile) storage medium.
In this era, a number of different machines were produced with steadily advancing capabilities. At the beginning of this period, nothing remotely resembling a modern computer existed, except in the long-lost plans of Charles Babbage and the mathematical musings of
Alan Turing and others. At the end of the era, devices like the EDSAC had been built, and are universally agreed to be digital computers. Defining a single point in the series as the "first computer" misses many subtleties.
Alan Turing's 1936 paper proved enormously influential in computing and
computer science in two ways. Its main purpose was to prove that there were problems (namely the
halting problem) that could not be solved by any sequential process. In doing so, Turing provided a definition of a universal computer, a construct that came to be called a
Turing machine, a purely theoretical device that formalizes the concept of
algorithm execution, replacing
Kurt Gödel's more cumbersome universal language based on arithmetics. Except for the limitations imposed by their finite memory stores, modern computers are said to be Turing-complete, which is to say, they have algorithm execution capability equivalent to a universal Turing machine. This limited type of Turing completeness is sometimes viewed as a threshold capability separating general-purpose computers from their special-purpose predecessors.
For a computing machine to be a practical general-purpose computer, there must be some convenient read-write mechanism, punched tape, for example. For full versatility, the
Von Neumann architecture uses the same memory both to store programs and data; virtually all contemporary computers use this architecture (or some variant). While it is theoretically possible to implement a full computer entirely mechanically (as Babbage's design showed), electronics made possible the speed and later the miniaturization that characterize modern computers.
There were three parallel streams of computer development in the World War II era, and two were either largely ignored or were deliberately kept secret. The first was the German work of
Konrad Zuse. The second was the secret development of the
Colossus computer in the UK. Neither of these had much influence on the various computing projects in the United States. After the war, British and American computing researchers cooperated on some of the most important steps towards a practical computing device.
Konrad Zuse's Z-series: the first program-controlled computers


A reproduction of Zuse's Z1 computer.
Working in isolation in
Germany,
Konrad Zuse started construction in 1936 of his first Z-series calculators featuring memory and (initially limited) programmability. Zuse's purely mechanical, but already binary
Z1, finished in 1938, never worked reliably due to problems with the precision of parts.
Zuse's subsequent machine, the
Z3, was finished in 1941. It was based on telephone relays and did work satisfactorily. The Z3 thus became the first functional program-controlled, all-purpose, digital computer. In many ways it was quite similar to modern machines, pioneering numerous advances, such as
floating point numbers. Replacement of the hard-to-implement decimal system (used in
Charles Babbage's earlier design) by the simpler binary system meant that Zuse's machines were easier to build and potentially more reliable, given the technologies available at that time. This is sometimes viewed as the main reason why Zuse succeeded where Babbage failed.
Programs were fed into
Z3 on punched films. Conditional jumps were missing, but since the 1990s it has been proved theoretically that Z3 was still a
universal computer (ignoring its physical storage size limitations). In two 1936
patent applications,
Konrad Zuse also anticipated that machine instructions could be stored in the same storage used for data – the key insight of what became known as the
Von Neumann architecture and was first implemented in the later British EDSAC design (1949). Zuse also claimed to have designed the first higher-level
programming language, (
Plankalkül), in 1945 (which was published in 1948) although it was implemented for the first time in 2000 by the
Free University of Berlin – five years after Zuse died.
Zuse suffered setbacks during
World War II when some of his machines were destroyed in the course of
Allied bombing campaigns. Apparently his work remained largely unknown to engineers in the UK and US until much later, although at least IBM was aware of it as it financed his post-war startup company in 1946 in return for an option on Zuse's patents.
American developments
In 1937,
Claude Shannon produced his master's thesis at
MIT that implemented
Boolean algebra using electronic relays and switches for the first time in history. Entitled
A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits, Shannon's thesis essentially founded practical
digital circuit design.
In November of 1937,
George Stibitz, then working at
Bell Labs, completed a relay-based computer he dubbed the "Model K" (for "
kitchen", where he had assembled it), which calculated using binary addition. Bell Labs authorized a full research program in late 1938 with Stibitz at the helm. Their Complex Number Calculator, completed
January 8,
1940, was able to calculate
complex numbers. In a demonstration to the
American Mathematical Society conference at
Dartmouth College on
September 11,
1940, Stibitz was able to send the Complex Number Calculator remote commands over telephone lines by a
teletype. It was the first computing machine ever used remotely, in this case over a phone line. Some participants in the conference who witnessed the demonstration were
John Von Neumann,
John Mauchly, and
Norbert Wiener, who wrote about it in his memoirs.
In 1939,
John Vincent Atanasoff and
Clifford E. Berry of
Iowa State University developed the Atanasoff–Berry Computer (ABC), a special purpose digital electronic calculator for solving systems of linear equations. (The original goal was to solve 29 simultaneous equations of 29 unknowns each, but due to errors in the card puncher mechanism the completed machine could only solve a few equations.) The design used over 300 vacuum tubes for high speed and employed capacitors fixed in a mechanically rotating drum for memory. Though the ABC machine was not programmable, it was the first to use electronic circuits.
ENIAC co-inventor
John Mauchly examined the ABC in June 1941, and its influence on the design of the later
ENIAC machine is a matter of contention among computer historians. The ABC was largely forgotten until it became the focus of the lawsuit
Honeywell v. Sperry Rand, the ruling of which invalidated the ENIAC patent (and several others) as, among many reasons, having been anticipated by Atanasoff's work.
In 1939, development began at IBM's Endicott laboratories on the
Harvard Mark I. Known officially as the Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator, the Mark I was a general purpose electro-mechanical computer built with IBM financing and with assistance from IBM personnel, under the direction of
Harvard mathematician
Howard Aiken. Its design was influenced by Babbage's Analytical Engine, using decimal arithmetic and storage wheels and rotary switches in addition to electromagnetic relays. It was programmable via punched paper tape, and contained several calculation units working in parallel. Later versions contained several paper tape readers and the machine could switch between readers based on a condition. Nevertheless, the machine was not quite Turing-complete. The Mark I was moved to
Harvard University and began operation in May 1944.
Colossus


Colossus was used to break German ciphers during
World War II.
During
World War II, the British at
Bletchley Park achieved a number of successes at breaking encrypted German military communications. The German encryption machine,
Enigma, was attacked with the help of electro-mechanical machines called
bombes. The
bombe, designed by
Alan Turing and
Gordon Welchman, after the Polish cryptographic
bomba (1938), ruled out possible Enigma settings by performing chains of logical deductions implemented electrically. Most possibilities led to a contradiction, and the few remaining could be tested by hand.
The Germans also developed a series of teleprinter encryption systems, quite different from Enigma. The
Lorenz SZ 40/42 machine was used for high-level Army communications, termed "
Tunny" by the British. The first intercepts of Lorenz messages began in 1941. As part of an attack on Tunny, Professor
Max Newman and his colleagues helped specify the
Colossus. The Mk I Colossus was built between March and December
1943 by
Tommy Flowers and his colleagues at the
Post Office Research Station at
Dollis Hill in London and then shipped to
Bletchley Park.
Colossus was the first totally
electronic computing device. The Colossus used a large number of valves (vacuum tubes). It had paper-tape input and was capable of being configured to perform a variety of
boolean logical operations on its data, but it was not Turing-complete. Nine Mk II Colossi were built (The Mk I was converted to a Mk II making ten machines in total). Details of their existence, design, and use were kept secret well into the 1970s. Winston Churchill personally issued an order for their destruction into pieces no larger than a man's hand. Due to this secrecy the Colossi were not included in many histories of computing. A reconstructed copy of one of the Colossus machines is now on display at Bletchley Park.
ENIAC


ENIAC performed ballistics trajectory calculations with 160 kW of power.
The US-built
ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer) was the first electronic general-purpose computer. Built under the direction of
John Mauchly and
J. Presper Eckert, it was 1,000 times faster than its contemporaries. ENIAC's development and construction lasted from 1943 to full operation at the end of 1945.
When its design was proposed, many researchers believed that the thousands of delicate valves (i.e. vacuum tubes) would burn out often enough that the ENIAC would be so frequently down for repairs as to be useless. It was, however, capable of up to thousands of operations per second for hours at a time between valve failures. It publicly validated the use of electronics for large-scale computing. This was crucial for the development of modern computing.
ENIAC was unambiguously a Turing-complete device. A "program" on the ENIAC, however, was defined by the states of its patch cables and switches, a far cry from the
stored program electronic machines that evolved from it. To program it meant to rewire it. (Improvements completed in 1948 made it possible to execute stored programs set in function table memory, which made programming less a "one-off" effort, and more systematic.)
First-generation von Neumann machine and the other works
Even before the ENIAC was finished, Eckert and Mauchly recognized its limitations and started the design of a new computer, EDVAC, which was to have stored-program.
John von Neumann wrote a
widely-circulated report describing the
EDVAC design in which both the programs and working data were stored in a single, unified store. This basic design, which became known as the
von Neumann architecture, would serve as the basis for the development of the first really flexible, general-purpose digital computers.
In this generation, temporary or working storage was provided by
acoustic delay lines, which used the propagation time of sound through a medium such as liquid
mercury (or through a wire) to briefly store data. As series of
acoustic pulses is sent along a tube; after a time, as the pulse reached the end of the tube, the circuitry detected whether the pulse represented a 1 or 0 and caused the oscillator to re-send the pulse. Others used
Williams tubes, which use the ability of a television picture tube to store and retrieve data. By 1954,
magnetic core memory was rapidly displacing most other forms of temporary storage, and dominated the field through the mid-1970s.


"Baby" at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester (MSIM), England
The first working
von Neumann machine was the Manchester "Baby" or
Small-Scale Experimental Machine, built at the
University of Manchester in 1948; it was followed in 1949 by the
Manchester Mark I computer which functioned as a complete system using the
Williams tube and
magnetic drum for memory, and also introduced
index registers. The other contender for the title "first digital stored program computer" had been EDSAC, designed and constructed at the
University of Cambridge. Operational less than one year after the Manchester "Baby", it was also capable of tackling real problems. EDSAC was actually inspired by plans for EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer), the successor to ENIAC; these plans were already in place by the time ENIAC was successfully operational. Unlike ENIAC, which used parallel processing, EDVAC used a single processing unit. This design was simpler and was the first to be implemented in each succeeding wave of miniaturization, and increased reliability.
Some view Manchester Mark I / EDSAC / EDVAC as the "Eves" from which nearly all current computers derive their architecture.
The first universal programmable computer in the Soviet Union was created by a team of scientists under direction of
Sergei Alekseyevich Lebedev from
Kiev Institute of Electrotechnology,
Soviet Union (now
Ukraine). The computer MESM (
МЭСМ,
Small Electronic Calculating Machine) became operational in 1950. It had about 6,000 vacuum tubes and consumed 25 kW of power. It could perform approximately 3,000 operations per second. Another early machine was
CSIRAC, an Australian design that ran its first test program in 1949.
In October 1947, the directors of
J. Lyons & Company, a British catering company famous for its teashops but with strong interests in new office management techniques, decided to take an active role in promoting the commercial development of computers. By 1951 the
LEO I computer was operational and ran the world's first regular routine office computer
job.
Manchester University's machine became the prototype for the
Ferranti Mark I. The first Ferranti Mark I machine was delivered to the University in February, 1951 and at least nine others were sold between 1951 and 1957.


UNIVAC I, above, the first commercial electronic computer in the United States (third in the world), achieved 1900 operations per second in a smaller and more efficient package than
ENIAC.
In June 1951, the
UNIVAC I (Universal Automatic Computer) was delivered to the
U.S. Census Bureau. Although manufactured by
Remington Rand, the machine often was mistakenly referred to as the "IBM UNIVAC". Remington Rand eventually sold 46 machines at more than $1 million each. UNIVAC was the first 'mass produced' computer; all predecessors had been 'one-off' units. It used 5,200 vacuum tubes and consumed 125 kW of power. It used a mercury delay line capable of storing 1,000 words of 11 decimal digits plus sign (72-bit words) for memory. Unlike IBM machines it was not equipped with a
punch card reader but 1930s style
metal magnetic tape input, making it incompatible with some existing commercial data stores. High speed
punched paper tape and modern-style
magnetic tapes were used for input/output by other computers of the era.
In November 1951, the
J. Lyons company began weekly operation of a bakery valuations job on the
LEO (Lyons Electronic Office). This was the first business application to go live on a stored program computer.
In 1952, IBM publicly announced the
IBM 701 Electronic Data Processing Machine, the first in its successful
700/7000 series and its first
IBM mainframe computer. The
IBM 704, introduced in 1954, used
magnetic core memory, which became the standard for large machines. The first implemented high-level general purpose
programming language,
Fortran, was also being developed at IBM for the 704 during 1955 and 1956 and released in early 1957. (Konrad Zuse's 1945 design of the high-level language
Plankalkül was not implemented at that time.)
IBM introduced a smaller, more affordable computer in 1954 that proved very popular. The
IBM 650 weighed over 900 kg, the attached power supply weighed around 1350 kg and both were held in separate cabinets of roughly 1.5 meters by 0.9 meters by 1.8 meters. It cost $500,000 or could be leased for $3,500 a month. Its
drum memory was originally only 2000 ten-digit words, and required arcane programming for efficient computing. Memory limitations such as this were to dominate programming for decades afterward, until the evolution of hardware capabilities and a programming model that were more sympathetic to software development.
In 1955,
Maurice Wilkes invented
microprogramming, which was later widely used in the
CPUs and
floating-point units of
mainframe and other computers, such as the
IBM 360 series.
Microprogramming allows the base instruction set to be defined or extended by built-in programs (now sometimes called
firmware,
microcode, or
millicode).
In 1956, IBM sold its
first magnetic disk system, RAMAC (Random Access Method of Accounting and Control). It used 50 24-inch metal disks, with 100 tracks per side. It could store 5
megabytes of data and cost $10,000 per megabyte. (As of 2006, magnetic storage, in the form of
hard disks, costs less than one tenth of a cent per megabyte).
Second generation: transistors
For a entry on perhaps the most successful Second Generation computer see
IBM 1401.
also see an external article on
Transistor: The Second Generation
Post-1960: third generation and beyond
Main article: History of computing hardware (1960s–present)
The explosion in the use of computers began with 'Third Generation' computers. These relied on
Jack St. Clair Kilby's and
Robert Noyce's independent invention of the
integrated circuit (or microchip), which later led to the invention of the
microprocessor, by
Ted Hoff and
Federico Faggin at
Intel.
During the 1960s there was considerable overlap between second and third generation technologies. As late as 1975, Sperry Univac continued the manufacture of second-generation machines such as the UNIVAC 494.
The microprocessor led to the development of the
microcomputer, small, low-cost computers that could be owned by individuals and small businesses. Microcomputers, the first of which appeared in the 1970s, became ubiquitous in the 1980s and beyond.
Steve Wozniak, co-founder of
Apple Computer, is credited with developing the first mass-market
home computers. However, his first computer, the
Apple I, came out some time after the
KIM-1 and
Altair 8800, and the first Apple computer with graphic and sound capabilities came out well after the
Commodore PET. Computing has evolved with microcomputer architectures, with features added from their larger brethren, now dominant in most market segments.
An indication of the rapidity of development of this field can be inferred by the Burks, Goldstein, von Neuman, seminal article, documented in the
Datamation September-October 1962 issue, which was written, as a preliminary version 15 years earlier. (See the
references below.) By the time that anyone had time to write anything down, it was obsolete.
See also
Early electronic digital computers
Footnotes
References
- Gottfried Leibniz, Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire (1703)
- A Spanish implementation of Napier's bones (1617), is documented in Hispano-American Encyclopedic Dictionary, Montaner i Simon (1887)
- Herman Hollerith, In connection with the electric tabulation system which has been adopted by U.S. government for the work of the census bureau. Ph.D. dissertation, Columbia University School of Mines (1890)
- W.J. Eckert, Punched Card Methods in Scientific Computation (1940) Columbia University. 136 pp. Index.
- Stanislaw Ulam, "John von Neumann, 1903–1957," Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 64, (1958)
- Arthur W. Burks, Herman H. Goldstine, and John von Neumann, "Preliminary discussion of the Logical Design of an Electronic Computing Instrument," Datamation, September-October 1962.
- Gordon Bell and Allen Newell, Computer Structures: Readings and Examples (1971). ISBN 0-07-004357-4
- Raul Rojas and Ulf Hashagen, (eds.) The First Computers: History and Architectures, MIT Press, Cambridge (2000). ISBN 0-262-68137-4
Books for further reading
See
List of books on the history of computing
External links
British history
history of computing is longer than the history of computing hardware and modern computing technology and includes the history of methods intended for pen and paper or for chalk and slate, with or without the aid of tables.
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history of computing hardware in former Soviet Bloc is somewhat different from that of Western countries. Since Communist party propaganda maintained that western construction was next to useless, and the West had strict export restrictions on this technology, everything had to be
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history of computer operating systems recapitulates to a degree, the recent history of computing.
Operating systems (OS) provide a set of functions needed and used by most application-programs on a computer, and the necessary linkages for the control and sychronization of
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Cost and Budget Overruns: The OS/360 operating system was a classic example. This decade-long project from the 1960s and 1970s eventually produced one of the most complex software systems ever created. OS/360 was one of the first large (1000 programmer) software projects.
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programming languages. For a detailed timeline of events, see the timeline of programming languages.
Prehistory
The first programming languages predate the modern computer. From the first, the languages were codes.
..... Click the link for more information. Limited computer power: There was not enough memory or processing speed to accomplish anything truly useful. For example, Ross Quillian's successful work on natural language was demonstrated with a vocabulary of only twenty
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The graphical user interface, or "GUI" (IPA: /ˈɡuːiː/), is a computer interface that uses graphic icons and controls in addition to text.
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first multiprotocol wide area network called the NASA Science Internet, or NSI. NSI was established to provide a total integrated communications infrastructure to the NASA scientific community for the advancement of earth, space and life sciences.
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World Wide Web ("WWW" or simply the "Web") is a global information medium which users can read and write via computers connected to the Internet. The term is often mistakenly used as a synonym for the Internet itself, but the Web is a service that operates over the
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Video games were introduced as a commercial entertainment medium in 1971, becoming the basis for an important entertainment industry in the late 1970s/early 1980s in the United States, Japan, and Europe.
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timeline of events in the history of computing. For a narrative explaining the overall developments, see the related History of computing.
Computing timelines: 2400 BC-1949, 1950-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-present
Resources
..... Click the link for more information. Computer data storage, computer memory, and often casually storage or memory refer to computer components, devices and recording media that retain digital data used for computing for some interval of time.
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A tally (or tally stick) was an ancient memory aid device to record and document numbers, quantities, or even messages. While the origin of this technique is lost in prehistory, archaeological proof of the existence of such devices is ample.
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Phoenicia (or Phenicia \fi-ˈnish-(ē-)ə, -ˈnēsh-\,[1] from Biblical Phenice \fi-ˈ
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Clay is a naturally occurring material, composed primarily of fine-grained minerals, which show plasticity through a variable range of water content, and which can be hardened when dried or fired.
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Merchants function as professionals who deal with trade, dealing in commodities that they do not produce themselves, in order to produce profit.
Merchants can be of two types:
- A wholesale merchant operates in the chain between producer and retail merchant.
..... Click the link for more information. Accountant, or Qualified Accountant, or Professional Accountant, is a certified accountancy and financial expert in the jurisdiction of many countries. Such as other legally-restricted professions including medical doctors and lawyers, different countries have their
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For the flat slab at the top of a column, see .
An
abacus (plurals
abacuses or
abaci), also called a
counting frame, is a calculating tool for performing arithmetical processes, often constructed as a wooden frame with beads
..... Click the link for more information. slide rule (often nicknamed a "slipstick"[1]) is a mechanical analog computer, consisting of at least two finely divided scales (rules), most often a fixed outer pair and a movable inner one, with a sliding window called the cursor.
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Norden bombsight was a highly sophisticated optical/mechanical analog computer used by the United States Army Air Force during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War to aid the pilot of a bomber aircraft in dropping bombs accurately.
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computer is a machine which manipulates data according to a list of instructions.
Computers take numerous physical forms. The first devices that resemble modern computers date to the mid-20th century (around 1940 - 1941), although the computer concept and various machines
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For the flat slab at the top of a column, see .
An
abacus (plurals
abacuses or
abaci), also called a
counting frame, is a calculating tool for performing arithmetical processes, often constructed as a wooden frame with beads
..... Click the link for more information. A calculator is a hand-held device for performing calculations. Although modern calculators often incorporate a general purpose computer, the device is designed for performing specific operations, rather than for flexibility.
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timeline of events in the history of computing. For a narrative explaining the overall developments, see the related History of computing.
Computing timelines: 2400 BC-1949, 1950-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-present
Resources
..... Click the link for more information. history of computing is longer than the history of computing hardware and modern computing technology and includes the history of methods intended for pen and paper or for chalk and slate, with or without the aid of tables.
..... Click the link for more information.
For the flat slab at the top of a column, see .
An
abacus (plurals
abacuses or
abaci), also called a
counting frame, is a calculating tool for performing arithmetical processes, often constructed as a wooden frame with beads
..... Click the link for more information. Ancient Mesopotamia
Euphrates Tigris
Cities / Empires
Sumer: Uruk ' Ur ' Eridu
Kish ' Lagash ' Nippur
Akkadian Empire: Akkad
Babylon ' Isin ' Susa
Assyria: Assur Nineveh
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Norden bombsight was a highly sophisticated optical/mechanical analog computer used by the United States Army Air Force during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War to aid the pilot of a bomber aircraft in dropping bombs accurately.
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Ancient history is the study of the written past from the beginning of human history until the Early Middle Ages[1]. The goal of the modern day critical ancient historian is objectivity.
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