Research Com Prog
Research Com Prog
De Asis
BS-CE 2C
1.) Abacus – The abacus is one of the earliest counting devices used for
arithmetic calculations. It originated 2700 years ago in Sumer. The abacus
is made of beads strung by several wires. The position of a bead
determines its value. Thus, only a few beads are required to represent
large numbers. The abacus is used typically for basic addition and
subtraction and the way it works is that the beads on the wooden rows are
moved according to certain rules. For example, if the abacus is used for
addition, beads are grouped together and if it were subtraction, they are
moved away from each other.
There are ten bones corresponding to the digits 0-9, and a special
eleventh bone that is used to represent the multiplier. The multiplier bone
is simply a list of the digits 1-9 arranged vertically downward. The
remainder of the bones each have a digit written in the top square, with
the multiplication table for those digits written downward, with the digits
split by a diagonal line going from the lower left to the upper right.
In practice, multiple sets of bones were needed for multiplication of
numbers containing repeated digits as needed in the row determined by
the multiplier.
3.) Pascaline Calculator - The Pascaline was designed and built by the
French mathematician-philosopher Blaise Pascal between 1642 and 1644.
This was invented to help his father, a tax collector, where arithmetic
operations involving large numbers had to be added or subtracted. This
mathematical apparatus had the ability to add, subtract, although it did not
do so directly, the machine was also capable of multiplying and dividing by
means of subtractions or additions in a repetitive manner.
The Pascaline had the shape of a shoe box and was low and somewhat
elongated. On the inside, there were a series of sprockets that were
connected to each other, thus forming a transmission chain, so that when
a wheel turned completely on its axle, it advanced one degree to the next.
These different wheels that were inside the Pascaline had as function to
represent the decimal system of numeration. Each wheel consisted of ten
steps, so it was also marked with numbers ranging from 9 to 0.
4.) The Millionaire - The millionaire was the first calculating machine that
could perform direct multiplication. Unlike its predecessors like the
Pascaline where multiplication is performed by repeated addition, the
millionaire only requires one turn of a crank and handle to multiply an
entered number by a multiply. The device used a mechanical
representation of the multiplication table to form partial products and it
solves problems involving multiplication by basing on that representation.
III. GENERATION OF COMPUTERS
During this generation, there was a shift from the use of transistors to
integrated circuits. Third generation computers emerged because of
the development of the integrated circuit. A single circuit has many
transistors, registers, and capacitors built on one thin slice of silicon,
now known as a microchip. The value size was reduced and memory
space and dealing efficiency were increased during this generation.
Minicomputers/microcomputers find their shape during this era
because the use of integrated circuits allowed the machines to be
smaller in size. In comparison to the previous generations where
computers would occupy whole rooms, the size of computers in this
generation were greatly reduced, allowing them to be as small as a
toaster.
The computers in this generation used the VLSI technology or the Very
Large Scale Integrated (VLSI) circuits technology. LSI circuits having
about 5000 transistors and other circuit elements with their associated
circuits on a single chip made it possible to have microcomputers of
fourth generation. Fourth generation computers became more
powerful, compact, reliable, and affordable. As a result, it gave rise to
Personal Computer (PC) revolution. In this generation, time-sharing,
real-time networks, distributed operating system were used. All the
high-level languages like C, C++, DBASE etc., were used in this
generation. Cathode-ray tube computer monitors were the most
commonly used in this generation.
E. Fifth Generation Computers (1980-Present)