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Computer History Myths Debunked

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Title: Computer History Myths Debunked


1
Computer History Myths Debunked
  • Dr. Wayne Summers
  • TSYS Department of Computer Science Columbus
    State University

2
"History of Computing at Oxford"
  • Part of the CSU in Oxford Summer Program with
    field trips to sites around England (July 6-July
    25, 2007).

3
COURSE
  • Book   Jacquard's Web How a Hand-Loom Led to
    the Birth of the Information Age by James
    Essinger
  • Wiki http//computer-history.pbwiki.com/
  • Blog http//computer-history-csu.blogspot.com/
  • Field Trips
  • Videos
  • The Machine That Changed the World(1-5)
  • To Dream Tomorrow

4
Field Trips
  • Oxford Museum of History of Science
  • London Museum of Science
  • Bletchley Park
  • Manchester Museum of Science and Industry

5
The Myths
  • Myth 1 Joseph-Marie Jacquard invented the
    punched card
  • Myth 2 Charles Babbage built the first computer
  • Myth 3 The Difference Engine was not completed
    because of inadequate tools in the 19th Century
    and/or lack of funds
  • Myth 4 Ada Lovelace was the first computer
    programmer
  • Myth 5 Herman Hollerith independently
    invented the punch cards
  • Myth 6 Howard Aiken and other computer
    designers of the modern era were not influenced
    by Babbage

6
Myth 1 Joseph-Marie Jacquard invented the
punched card
  • On 23 Dec. 1800, he registered a patent for a
    machine designed to replace the draw-boy in the
    manufacture of figured fabrics.
  • Jacques de Vaucanson is credited with creating
    the world's first true robots, as well as
    creating the first completely automated loom
    (1740).
  • In 1728, Jean Falcon built a loom that used
    punched cards
  • In 1725, Basile Bouchon invented a way to control
    a loom with a perforated paper tape. The son of
    an organ maker, he adapted the concept of music
    automata controlled by pegged cylinders to the
    repetitive task of weaving.

7
Jacquards Loom
  • London Museum of Science

8
Myth 2 Charles Babbage built the first computer
  • Charles Babbage did design the Difference Engine
    and the Analytical Engine (neither were completed
    by him)
  • My God, Herschel! How I wish these calculations
    could be executed by steam.1821
  • In 1824, Babbage won the Gold Medal of the Royal
    Astronomical Society "for his invention of an
    engine for calculating mathematical and
    astronomical tables".

9
London Museum of Science
  • Babbages Difference Engine (1822-1849) original
    piece
  • 2/3 of Babbages Brain

10
Myth 3 The Difference Engine was not completed
because of inadequate tools in the 19th Century
and/or lack of funds
  • Babbage had access to one of the best toolmakers
    of the day Joseph Clement who did build a small
    prototype by 1822
  • Per Georg Scheutz and son built a small
    difference engine machine in 1843
  • Difference Engine in the London Science Museum
    was built to Babbages specs with 19th century
    tools (1985-1991)

11
London Museum of Science
  • Per Georg Scheutzs Difference Engine
  • Recreation of Difference Engine for shipment to
    California (2007)

12
Myth 3 The Difference Engine was not completed
because of inadequate tools in the 19th Century
and/or lack of funds
  • By 1834, he had received 17,470 (enough to build
    two battleships) to build the Difference Engine,
    but starting to design the Analytical Engine
  • By 1834, he had started work on the Analytical
    Engine (using punched cards to store data and
    instructions was able to perform calculations
    automatically)
  • Told Sir Robert Peel that he had stopped work on
    the Difference Engine so that he could build the
    Analytical Engine

13
Charles Babbage Father of Computing
  • 1791 - 1871
  • formed the Analytical Society in 1812
  • Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge
    (1828 to 1839)

14
Charles Babbage Father of Computing
  • On two occasions I have been asked, "Pray, Mr.
    Babbage," if you put into the machine wrong
    figures, will the right "answers come out?" In
    one case a member of the Upper, and in the other
    a member of the Lower, House put this question. I
    am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of
    confusion of ideas that could provoke such a
    question.

15
Charles Babbage Father of Computing
  • Counted all the broken panes of glass of a
    factory, publishing in 1857 a "Table of the
    Relative Frequency of the Causes of Breakage of
    Plate Glass Windows" 14 of 464 were caused by
    "drunken men, women or boys".
  • His distaste for commoners ("the Mob") included
    writing "Observations of Street Nuisances" in
    1864, as well as tallying up 165 "nuisances" over
    a period of 80 days he especially hated street
    music.
  • Obsessed with fire, once baking himself in an
    oven at 265F (130C) for four minutes "without
    any great discomfort" to "see what would happen."
  • Later, he arranged to be lowered into Mount
    Vesuvius in order to view molten lava for himself.

16
Myth 4 Ada Lovelace was the first computer
programmer
  • Analytical Engine was never built
  • Published a translation of Menabreas paper
    describing the Analytical Engine along with her
    own seven Notes (A-G) (1842-1843)
  • http//www.fourmilab.ch/babbage/sketch.html

17
Myth 5 Herman Hollerith independently
invented the punch cards
  • His brother-in-law was in the silk-weaving
    business and had discussed the Jacquard loom with
    him
  • Hollerith never pretended to have invented
    punched cards himself Essinger
  • His basic patents always encompassed the use of
    punched cards in combination with his machines
    Essinger

18
Myth 6 Howard Aiken and other computer
designers of the modern era were not influenced
by Babbage
19
Which was the first computer?
  • Difference Engine (1843) / Analytical Engine
  • AtanasoffBerry Computer (1937-1941)
  • Zuses Z3 (1941)
  • Collusus (1943-1944)
  • Eniac (1943-1946)
  • IBM Harvard Mark I (1944)
  • Manchester Baby (1948) / Mark I

20
Babbages Difference Engine II with printer
(built 1991)
  • London Museum of Science

21
Analytical Engine piece (designed 1837-1871)
  • London Museum of Science

22
Colossus
  • Bletchley Park

23
Manchester Baby Replica
  • Manchester Museum of Science and Industry

24
Trick question
  • What was the average weight of a computer in the
    early 1940s?

25
  • If the Analytical Engine had been built, it would
    have been in many ways more advanced than some of
    the first computers that emerged in the 1940s. It
    would have been digital, programmable and Turing
    complete.
  • However, it would have been very slow. Ada
    Lovelace reported in her notes on the Analytical
    engine "Mr. Babbage believes he can, by his
    engine, form the product of two numbers, each
    containing twenty figures, in three minutes".
  • By comparison the Harvard Mark I could perform
    the same task in just six seconds. A modern PC
    can do the same thing in well under a billionth
    of a second.

26
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27
References
  • Jacquard's Web How a Hand-Loom Led to the Birth
    of the Information Age by James Essinger
  • Sketch of The Analytical Engine With notes by the
    Translator Ada Augusta, Countess Of Lovelace
  • History of Modern Computing by Paul Ceruzzi
  • The Machine That Changed the World(1-5) PBS
    Nova videos
  • To Dream Tomorrow Flare Productions video
  • .

28
We may say most aptly that the Analytical Engine
weaves algebraic patterns just as the
Jacquard-loom weaves flowers and leaves. Ada
Augusta, Countess Of Lovelace (October 1842)
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