MIL Lesson 2 Evolution of Media
MIL Lesson 2 Evolution of Media
MIL Lesson 2 Evolution of Media
n o Traditional
f to
New Media
Evolution of Media
Activity Year
Rock Carving 200, 000 BC
Song, Music & Dance Between 100,000 BC & 30,000 BC
Language and Oration Between 100,000 BC & 30,000 BC
Body Art Between 100,000 BC & 30,000 BC
Jewelry Between 100,000 BC & 30,000 BC
Mythology Between 100,000 BC & 30,000 BC
Cave Paintings and Visual Symbols Between 100,000 BC & 30,000 BC
Sculpture Between 100,000 BC & 30,000 BC
Pottery 14,000 BC
Megalithic Architecture 4000 BC
3000 BC – 100 AD
Activity Year
Writing 3000 BC
Metallurgical Art and Bronze 3000 BC
Sculpture
Alphabet 2000 BC
Drama 500 BC
Paper 100 AD
B. Industrial Age (1700s – 1930s)
Activity Year
Transistor Radio 1954
Television 1941
Large Electronic Computers 1951
Mainframe Computers 1960
Personal Computers 1976
Transistor Radio
A transistor is a semiconductor
device used to amplify or switch
A transistor radio is a small electronic signals and electrical
portable radio receiver that power.
uses transistor-based circuitry.
EDSAC
The electronic delay storage
automatic calculator (EDSAC)
was an early British computer.
Inspired by John von Neumann's
seminal First Draft of a Report on
the EDVAC, the machine was
constructed by Maurice Wilkes
and his team at the University of
Cambridge Mathematical
Laboratory in England. EDSAC
was the second electronic
digital stored-program computer
to go into regular service.
UNIVAC I
The UNIVAC I was
the first commercial
computer produced
in the United States.
It was designed
principally by J.
Presper Eckert and
John Mauchly, the
inventors of the
ENIAC
IBM 704
The IBM 704,
introduced
by IBM in 1954, is
the first mass-
produced computer
with floating-
point arithmetic
hardware..
Hewlett-Packard 9100A
Apple 1
D. Information Age (1900s – 2000s)