Lesson 3 HISTORY OF COMPUTER
Lesson 3 HISTORY OF COMPUTER
Lesson 3 HISTORY OF COMPUTER
COMPUTER
Lesson 3
Living in the IT Era
Objectives:
• Gain familiarity of the different discoveries
during the different periods.
• Learn different inventions and discoveries
during electro-mechanical age that lead to the
inventions of today’s technology.
• Identify different technologies and their
improvements during the different generations.
Definition of Computer
• Computer is a programmable machine.
• Computer is an electronic device that manipulates information, or data. It
can store, retrieve, and process data.
• Computer is a machine that manipulates data according to a list of
instructions (program).
• Computer is any device which aids humans in performing various kinds of
computations or calculations.
Three principal characteristics of computer:
A tally stick was an ancient memory aid device to record and document numbers,
quantities, or even messages.
Abacus
• An abacus is a mechanical
device used to aid an
individual in performing
mathematical calculations.
• The abacus was invented in
Babylonia in 2400 B.C.
• The abacus in the form we
are most familiar with was
first used in China in around
500 B.C.
• It used to perform basic
arithmetic operations.
Napier’s
Bones
• Invented by John Napier in
1614.
• Allowed the operator to
multiply, divide and calculate
square and cube roots by
moving the rods around and
placing them in specially
constructed boards.
Slide Rule
•Invented by William Oughtred in
1622.
•Is based on Napier's ideas about
logarithms.
•Used primarily for Multiplication,
division, roots, logarithms,
Trigonometry
•• Not normally used for addition or
subtraction.
Pascaline
• Invented by Blaise
Pascal in 1642.
• It was its limitation
to addition and
subtraction.
• It is too expensive.
Stepped
Reckoner
• Invented by
Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz in 1672.
• The machine that can
add, subtract,
multiply and divide
automatically.
Jacquard Loom
• The Jacquard loom is
a mechanical loom,
invented by Joseph-
Marie Jacquard in 1881.
• It is an automatic
loom controlled by
punched cards.
Arithmometer
• A mechanical calculator
invented by Thomas de Colmar
in 1820,
• The first reliable, useful and
commercially successful
calculating machine.
• The machine could perform the
four basic mathematic
functions.
• The first mass-produced
calculating machine.
Difference and
Analytical Engine
• It an automatic, mechanical
calculator designed to
tabulate polynomial
functions.
• Invented by Charles Babbage
in 1822 and 1834
• It is the first mechanical
computer.
First Computer
Programmer
• In 1840, Augusta Ada
Byron suggests to
Babbage that he use the
binary system.
• She writes programs for
the Analytical Engine.
Scheutzian
Calculation
Engine
• Invented by Per Georg
Scheutz in 1843.
• Based on Charles
Babbage's difference
engine.
• The first printing
calculator.
Tabulating
Machine
• Invented by Herman
Hollerith in 1890.
• To assist in
summarizing
information and
accounting.
Harvard Mark 1
• Also known as IBM
Automatic Sequence
Controlled Calculator
(ASCC).
• Invented by Howard H.
Aiken in 1943
• The first electro-
mechanical computer.
Z1
• The first programmable
computer.
• Created by Konrad Zuse in
Germany from 1936 to 1938.
• To program the Z1 required
that the user insert punch tape
into a punch tape reader and
all output was also generated
through punch tape.
ENIAC
• ENIAC stands for
Electronic Numerical
Integrator and Computer.
• It was the first electronic
general-purpose
computer.
• Completed in 1946.
• Developed by John
Presper Eckert and John
Mauchly.
UNIVAC 1
• The UNIVAC I
(UNIVersal Automatic
Computer 1) was the
first commercial
computer.
• Designed by John
Presper Eckert and
John Mauchly.
EDVAC
• EDVAC stands for Electronic
Discrete Variable Automatic
Computer
• The First Stored Program
Computer
• Designed by Von Neumann
in 1952.
• It has a memory to hold both
a stored program as well as
data.
The First Portable
Computer