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Title: Introduction to the History of Computing


1
Introduction to the History of Computing
2
Mechanical ComputersGeneration 0
  • Didnt use electricity, some used gears, wires,
    beads
  • Abacus
  • 1000-500 BC (Babylonians) mechanical aid used
    for counting

The Salamis Tablet (Greek, 300BC)
The Roman Hand Abacus
3
Abacus (cont.)
Middle Ages 5 A.D to c1400 A.D
4
Da Vincis Mechanical Calculator
Notebook sketches c1500
Working model
5
Napiers Bones
  • Early 1600s
  • Multiplication tables inscribed on strips of wood
    and bones

6
Oughtreds Slide Rule
  • Rev. William Oughtred 1621
  • Use logs to perform multiplication and division
    by using addition and subtraction

7
Pascals arithmetic engine
  • Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
  • Mechanical calculator for addition and subtraction

8
Leibnezs Step Reckoner
  • Gottfried von Leibnez 1670
  • Add, subtract, multiply, divide, square roots

9
Jacquards punch card
  • Joseph Marie Jacquard
  • 1805 punch cards used to operator loom
  • Could reprogram loom by changing cards

10
Babbages Engines
Charles Babbage (1791-1871)
  • Same chair at Cambridge as Newton and Hawking
  • Designed the difference engine and later, the
    analytical engine
  • Brass gears and strings of punch cards run by
    steam
  • Analytical Engine never built

11
The Worlds First Programmer
  • Lady Ada Byron, Countess of Lovelace (1815-1952)
  • Understood Babbages Analytical Engine
  • saw it as what we would call a general-purpose
    computer.
  • Her notes anticipate future developments,
    including computer-generated music.

12
Holleriths Tabulating Machine
  • Herman Hollerith (1860-1929)
  • Invented a punched card device to help analyse
    the 1890 US census data
  • Founded Tabulating Machine Company 1896
  • 1924 Tabulating Machine Company merges with
    others to form IBM

13
MIT Differential Analyzer
  • Purpose to solve differential equations
  • Mechanical computation with first use of vacuum
    tubes for memory
  • Programmed by aligning gears on shafts
  • 1930s

14
Alan Turing (1912-1954)
  • Develops theory of computability and the Turing
    Machine model a simple but elegant
    mathematical model of a general purpose computer
    (1936)
  • Helped crack German codes in WWII (1939-1945)

15
Konrad Zuse
  • 1936 Z1 first binary computer using Erector Set
    parts, keyboard and lights for output (relay
    memory)
  • 1938 Z2 using punched tape and relays

Z1
16
Vacuum TubesGeneration 1
  • 1939 Atanasoff-Berry Computer
  • First electronic-digital computer?
  • Binary numbers, direct logic for calculation,
    regenerative memory
  • Prototype 1939
  • 2 years then to build full scale model
  • One op per 15 secs, 300 vacuum tubes, 700 pounds,
    mile of wire

ABC Prototype
17
The first computers (cont.)
  • 1943 British Colossus first all-electronic
    computer? (2,400 vacuum tubes)
  • Decipher enigma coded messages at 5,000 chars/sec
  • At peak, 10 machines ran 24 hours a day

A German enigma coding machine
18
The first computers (cont.)
  • 1943-44 Aiken at Harvard/IBM Mark 1 first
    electromechanical digital computer
    (electromagnetic relays magnets open and close
    metal switches) (recreation of Analytical Engine)
  • 8 ft tall, 50 ft long, 1 million parts
  • 323 decimal-digit additions per sec
  • storage for 72 23-digit numbers.

19
ENIAC (1946)
  • 18,000 tubes, 1500 sq ft
  • Programmed by wire plugs into panels
  • 5,000 decimal-digit additions/sec
  • 20 10-decimal digit accumulators
  • 1941 Von Neumann proposes EDVAC Electronic
    Discrete Variable Computer
  • Computer should
  • Use binary
  • Have stored programs
  • Be function-oriented

Von Neumann and ENIAC
20
UNIVAC-1
  • The worlds first commercially available
    (non-military) computer
  • I think there is a world market for about five
    computers
  • Thomas J. Watson, IBM Chairman

21
TransistorsGeneration 2
  • Transistors replace vacuum tubes
  • Size and cost decreased, speed increased
  • 1960s IBM sells large mainframe computers to
    businesses, called 700 series
  • Mainframes run operating systems that allow many
    dumb terminals to be attached
  • Typical business applications are custom written
    and run in batch mode

22
Integrated CircuitsGeneration 3
  • Integrated circuits contain many transistors on
    one chip
  • 1971 Intel produces 4004 chip with all circuitry
    for a calculator

23
VLSI Generation 4
  • Mid 1970s
  • Very large scale integration
  • 1977 Apple Corporation started by Steve Jobs
    sells personal computer for hobbyists
  • 1980 IBM creates the PC to sell to businesses
  • The PC is widely cloned and becomes widely
    accepted as prices drop
  • PCs and clones use a text based operating system
    called DOS to programs
  • 1984 Apple releases the MAC with a graphical user
    interface
  • Generations on How Webopedia

IBM PC c1982
24
Programming Language History
  • Programming languages instruct computers what to
    do
  • Charles Babbage's difference engine could only be
    made to execute tasks by changing the gears which
    executed the calculations
  • US Government ENIAC could only be "programmed" by
    presetting switches and rewiring the entire
    system for each new "program" or calculation

25
Programming Language HistoryGeneration 1
  • late 40s / early 50s programmers coded
    directly in machine language
  • it allowed the programmer to write its statements
    in 0's and 1's by hand

01111111010001010100110001000110000000010000001000
000001000000000000000000 0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000100000
00000000010000000000000000000000000000000010000000
000000000000000000000000 0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000000001010000100000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000011010000000000000
000000000000000000000000 0000000101000000000000000
1000000000000000000100000000001011100111001101101
00001110011011101000111001001110100011000010110001
000000000001011100111010 0011001010111100001110100
0000000000101110011100100110111101100100011000010
11101000110000100000000001011100111001101111001011
011010111010001100001011 0001000000000001011100111
0011011101000111001001110100011000010110001000000
00000101110011100100110010101101100011000010010111
001110100011001010111100 0011101000000000000101110
0110001101101111011011010110110101100101011011100
11101000000000000000000000000000000000010011101111
000111011111110010000000 1001100000000000000000000
0000100100000001001001100000000000000001010100000
00000000000000000001001001000010010101000000000000
001000000000000000000000 0000000000000000100000000
0000000000000000101000000001000000000000000010001
00100000001000000000000000100000001010100000000000
000000000000010010010000 1001010100000000000000100
0000000000000000000000000000000000010000000000000
00000000000101100000001000000000000000100001000000
000000000000000100000000 1000000000000000000000000
1000000111000111111000000000100010000001111010000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000010
010000110010101101100011 0110001101111011101110110
1111011100100110110001100100001000010000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
100000000000000000000000 0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000001000000000011111111111100010
00000000000000000000000000000010000000000000000000
000000000000000000000000 0000000000000000000000000
0100000000001111111111110001000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
000000000000000000000000 0000000110000000000000000
0000001100000000000000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
000000000000000000000000 0010000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000110000000000000000
000000100000000000000000
26
Programming Language HistoryGeneration 2
  • mid 1950s assembly languages replaced numeric
    codes with mnemonic names
  • an assembler is a program that translates
    assembly code into machine code
  • input assembly language program
  • output machine language program
  • still low-level machine-specific, but easier
    to program
  • In 1951, Grace Hopper (US Rear Admiral) wrote the
    first compiler, A-0, which turned English-like
    instructions into 0's and 1's

gcc2_compiled. .global _Q_qtod .section
".rodata" .align 8 .LLC0 .asciz "Hello
world!" .section ".text" .align 4 .global
main .type main,function .proc 04 main
!PROLOGUE 0 save sp,-112,sp !PROLOGUE
1 sethi hi(cout),o1 or o1,lo(cout),o0 sethi
hi(.LLC0),o2 or o2,lo(.LLC0),o1 call
__ls__7ostreamPCc,0 nop mov o0,l0 mov
l0,o0 sethi hi(endl__FR7ostream), or
o2,lo(endl__FR7ostream), call __ls__7ostreamPFR
7ostream_R7ostream,0 nop mov 0,i0 b
.LL230 nop .LL230 ret restore .LLfe1 .size
main,.LLfe1-main .ident "GCC (GNU) 2.7.2"
27
Programming Language HistoryGeneration 3
  • In 1957, IBM creates the first of the major
    languages called FORTRAN.
  • Its name stands for FORmula TRANslating system.
  • The language was designed for scientific
    computing.
  • Excellent language for scientific work, difficult
    input/output operations

28
Programming Language History
  •  In 1958, John McCarthy of MIT created the LISt
    Processing (or LISP) language.
  • It was designed for Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    research.
  • Because it was designed for such a highly
    specialized field, its syntax has rarely been
    seen before or since.
  • Still in use today for AI research, offsprings
    include Scheme

29
Programming Language History
  • 1959 COBOL was developed for businesses.
  • COBOL statements have a very English-like
    grammar, making it quite easy to learn.
  • Much better input/output than FORTRAN permitting
    business applications
  • Highly successful and used on most IBM mainframe
    computers, even today.

30
Programming Language History
  • The BASIC language was developed in 1964 by John
    Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz.
  • BASIC is a very limited language and was designed
    for non-computer science people.
  • Many versions of BASIC were developed, Bill Gates
    and his partner started business by writing a
    version of BASIC for a hobby computer
  • Bill Gates would later start Microsoft when he
    licenses the DOS operating system to IBM

31
Programming Languages History
  • Pascal was begun in 1968 by Niklaus Wirth.
  • Its development was mainly out of necessity for a
    good teaching tool.
  • Pascal was designed in a very orderly approach,
    it combined many of the best features of the
    languages in use at the time, COBOL, FORTRAN, and
    ALGOL.

32
Programming Language History
  •  C was developed in 1972 by Dennis Ritchie while
    working at Bell Labs in New Jersey.
  • The transition in usage from the first major
    languages to the major languages of today
    occurred with the transition between Pascal and
    C.
  • C was built to be fast and powerful at the
    expense of being hard to read.
  • Ritchie developed C for the new Unix system being
    created at the same time.
  • C is very commonly used to program operating
    systems such as Unix, Windows, the MacOS, and
    Linux.

33
Programming Language History
  • In the late 1970's and early 1980's, a new
    programming method was being developed called
    Object Oriented Programming, or OOP.
  • Bjarne Stroustroup liked this method and
    developed extensions to C known as C, which was
    released in 1983.
  • C was designed to organize the raw power of C
    using OOP, but maintain the speed of C and be
    able to run on many different types of computers.
  • C is most often used in simulations, such as
    games.

34
Programming Language History
  • Visual Basic 1 is released by Microsoft in 1991
  • It includes a combination of QuickBasic
    (Microsofts version of BASIC) and a graphical
    design tool for creating the User Interface
    (originally developed by Alan Cooper)
  • It includes an event-driven programming paradigm

35
Programming Language History
  • In the early 1990's, interactive TV was the
    technology of the future.
  • Sun Microsystems decided that interactive TV
    needed a special, portable (can run on many types
    of machines), language.
  • This language eventually became Java.
  • In 1994, the Java project team changed their
    focus to the web, which was becoming "the cool
    thing" after interactive TV failed.
  • The next year, Netscape licensed Java for use in
    their internet browser, Navigator.
  • At this point, Java became the language of the
    future.

36
Programming Language HistoryGeneration 4
  • Often abbreviated 4GL, fourth-generation
    languages are programming languages closer to
    human languages than typical 3rd generation
    languages.
  • In 1969, a language called RAMIS was released
  • Most 4GLs are used to access databases and do in
    a few lines of code what would require hundreds
    of lines of COBOL or C.
  • For example, a typical 4GL command is FIND ALL
    RECORDS WHERE NAME IS "SMITH"
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