© Educational Technology Department, Group Head Office, The City School. 1
© Educational Technology Department, Group Head Office, The City School. 1
© Educational Technology Department, Group Head Office, The City School. 1
Disadvantages :
Too bulky i.e large in size
Vacuum tubes burn frequently
They were producing heat
Maintenance©Head
problems
Educational Technology Department, Group
Office, The City School. 5
Second Generation Computers
(1956-1963)
• Transistors replaced vacuum tubes and ushered in the
second generation of computers.
• Second-generation computers moved from
cryptic binary machine language to symbolic.
• High-level programming languages were also being
developed at this time, such as early versions
of COBOL and FORTRAN.
• These were also the first computers that stored their
instructions in their memory.
Disadvantages :
They over heated quickly
Maintenance problems
© Educational Technology Department, Group
Head Office, The City School. 7
Third Generation Computers
(1964-1971)
The development of the integrated circuit was the
hallmark of the third generation of computers.
Transistors were miniaturized and placed
on siliconchips, called semiconductors.
Instead of punched cards and printouts, users
interacted with third generation computers
through keyboards and monitors and interfaced with
an operating system.
Allowed the device to run many
different applications at one time.
© Educational Technology Department, Group
Head Office, The City School. 8
Third generation computers
Advantages :
ICs are very small in size
Improved performance
Production cost cheap
Disadvantages :
ICs are sophisticated