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Definition of a Computer
-
before 1935, a computer was a person who performed arithmetic calculations.
Between 1935 and 1945 the definition referred to a machine, rather than
a person. The modern machine definition is based on von Neumann's concepts:
a
device that accepts input, processes data, stores data, and produces output.
We have gone from the vacuum tube to the transistor, to the microchip. Then the microchip started talking to the modem. Now we exchange text, sound, photos and movies in a digital environment. Computing milestones and machine evolution:
Charles Babbage (1792-1871) - Difference Engine, Analytical Engine. Ada Byron, daughter of the poet, Lord Byron, worked with him. His description, in 1837, of the Analytical Engine, a mechanical digital computer anticipated virtually every aspect of present-day computers. Sketch of the Engine and notes by Ada Byron King, Countess of Lovelace. Alan Turing -- 1912-1954. British Codebreaker. Worked on the Colossus (code breaking machine, precursor to the computer) and the ACE (Automatic Computing Engine). Noted for many brilliant ideas, Turing is perhaps best remembered for the concepts of the Turing Test for Artificial Intelligence and the Turing Machine, an abstract model for modeling computer operations. The Turing Test is the "acid test" of true artificial intelligence, as defined by the English scientist Alan Turing. In the 1940s, he said "a machine has artificial intelligence when there is no discernible difference between the conversation generated by the machine and that of an intelligent person." Turing was instrumental in breaking the German enigma code during WWII with his Bombe computing machine. The Enigma is a machine used by the Germans to create encrypted messages. See Turing's Treatise on Enigma. See explanation of "The Turing Test": Oppy, Graham, Dowe, David, "The Turing Test", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2003 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.),
<http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2003/entries/turing-test/>.
J. von Neumann -- (1903-1957). A child prodigy in mathematics, authored landmark paper explaining how programs could be stored as data. (Unlike ENIAC, which had to be re-wired to be re-programmed.). Virtually all computers today, from toys to supercomputers costing millions of dollars, are variations on the computer architecture that John von Neumann created on the foundation of the work of Alan Turing's work in the 1940s. It included three components used by most computers today: a CPU; a slow-to-access storage area, like a hard drive; and secondary fast-access memory (RAM ). The machine stored instructions as binary values (creating the stored program concept) and executed instructions sequentially - the processor fetched instructions one at a time and processed them. The instruction is analyzed, data is processed, the next instruction is analyzed, etc. Today "von Neumann architecture" often refers to the sequential nature of computers based on this model. See another von Neumann source. John V. Atanasoff -- (1904 - 1995) - one of the contenders, along with Konrad Zuse and H. Edward Roberts and others, as the inventor of the first computer. The limited-function vacuum-tube device had limited capabilities and did not have a central. It was not programmable, but could solve differential equations using binary arithmetic. Atanasoff's Computer. J. Presper Eckert, Jr. and John W. Mauchly completed the first programmed general purpose electronic digital computer in 1946. They drew on Alansoff's work to create the ENIAC, the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer. In 1973 a patent lawsuit resulted in John V. Atanasoff's being legally declared as the inventor. Though Atanasoff got legal status for his achievement, many historians still give credit to J. Presper Eckert, Jr., and John W. Mauchly the founding fathers of the modern computer. Eckert and Mauchly formed the first computer company in 1946. Eckert received 87 patents. They introduced the first modern binany computer with the Binary Automatic Computer (BINAC), which stored information on magnetic tape rather than punched cards. Their UNIVAC I ,was built for the U.S. Census Bureau. Their company was acquired by by Remington Rand, which merged into the Sperry Rand Corp. and then into Unisys Corp. Eckert retired from Unisys in 1989. Konrad Zuse-- (1910-1995) German who, during WW II, designed mechanical and electromechanical computers. Zuse's Z1, his contender for the first freely programmable computer, contained all the basic components of a modern computer (control unit, memory, micro sequences, etc.). Zuse, because of the scarcity of material during WW II, used discarded video film as punch cards. Like a modern computer, it was adaptable for different purposes and used on/off switch relays, a binary system of 1s and 0s (on = 1, off = 0). Completed in 1938, it was destroyed in the bombardment of Berlin in WW II, along with the construction plans. In 1986, Zuse reconstructed the Z1. H. Edward Roberts -- developed the MITS Altair 8800 in 1975. The Altair is considered by some to be the first microcomputer (personal computer)., The MITS Altair 8800 was based on a 2 MHz Intel 8080 chip, with 256 bytes, standard RAM. It was developed a year before the first Apple, by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, came out. Paul Allen and Bill Gates (then a student at Harvard) wrote a scaled down version of the Basic programming language to run on the Altair , which was the beginning of Microsoft. See details about the MITS Altair 8800 at the Computer Museum of America (http://www.computer-museum.org/collections/mits8800.html) We can't talk about computers without mentioning: The Birth of the Internet The Internet, originally the ARPAnet (Advanced Research Projects Agency network), began as a military computer network in 1969. This network was an experimental project of the U.S. Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).Other government agencies and universities created internal networks based on the ARPAnet model. The catalyst for the Internet today was provided by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Rather than have a physical communications connection from each institution to a supercomputing center, the NSF began a "chain" of connections in which institutions would be connected to their "neighbor" computing centers, which all tied into central supercomputing centers. This beginning expanded to a global network of computer networks, which allows computers all over the world to communicate with one another and share information stored at various computer "servers," either on a local computer or a computer located anywhere in the world. In 1986, came the birth of the National Science Foundation Network (NSFNET), which scientists across the country with five supercomputer centers. Universities were early users of the Internet. In 1992, the Internet was still primarily used by researchers and academics. In 1995, large commercial Internet service providers (ISPs), such as MCI, Sprint , AOL and UUNET, began offering service to large number of customers. The Internet now links thousands of computer networks, reaching people all over the world. See this Atlas of Cyberspaces for graphical images of networks in cyberspace. Since traffic on the Internet has become so heavy, some of the scientific and academic institutions that formed the original Internet developed a new global network called Internet 2. Known as the Abilene Project, and running on fast fiber-optic cable, it officially opened for business in February, 1999 at a ceremony in Washington, D.C. George Mason University is one of 150 universities in the United States that are working on the Internet 2 project with industry through the University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development (UCAID) to improve the functionality and capabilities of the Internet. The network's 2.4 gigabit-per-second speed started with a transmission speed of 45,000 faster than a 56K modem. The Birth of the WWW 1990 - Tim Berners-Lee, currently the director of the World Wide Web Consortium, the coordinating body for Web development, invented the World Wide Web. He occupies the 3Com Founders chair at the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science. The WWW was originally conceived and developed for the high-energy physics collaborations, which require instantaneous information sharing between physicists working in different universities and institutes all over the world. Now the WWW is used by people all over the world, children and adults, for personal, commercial, and academic uses. Berners-Lee and Robert Cailliau wrote the first WWW client and server software, defining Web addresses (URLs), hypertext transfer protocol (http) and hypertext markup language (html). Here is Tim Berners-Lee's original proposal to attempt to persuade CERN management to initiate a global hypertext system, which Berners-Lee called "Mesh" before he decided on the name "World Wide Web" when writing the code in 1990. In December 1993, Berners-Lee and Cailliau, along with Marc Andreesen and E. Bina of NCSA, shared the Association for Computing (ACM) Software System Award for developing the World-Wide Web. The graphical Web browser, Mosaic, evolved into Netscape. The WWW is based on the hypertext protocol. What is hypertext, anyway? See CERN's overview of the WWW (What it is and its progress). The ease of using the World Wide Web has made it easier for people to connect with one another, overcoming the obstacles of time and space. This networking has spawned numerous virtual communities and cybercultures. See this list of resources on cybercultures. The WWW has also become a convenient way to buy and sell services and goods. The Internet and WWW do not come without ethical and legal ramifications, such as copyright infringement, computer spying and hacking, computer viruses, fraud, and privacy issues. See links to computer Ethics, Laws, Privacy Issues. Also see Internet copyright resources. What's next?? - something interesting to ponder: Nanotechnology - K. Eric Drexler is the founding father of nanotechnology, the idea of using individual atoms and molecules to build living and mechanical "things" in miniature factories. His vision is that if scientists can engineer DNA on a molecular, why can't we build machines out of atoms and program them to build more machines? The requirement for low cost creates an interest in these "self replicating manufacturing systems," studied by von Neumann in the 1940's. These "nanorobots, " programmed by miniature computers smaller than the human cell, could go through the bloodstream curing disease, perform surgery, etc. If this technology comes about the barriers between engineered and living systems may be broken. Researchers at various institutions and organizations, like NASA and Xerox, are working on this technology. See The NanoAge website. Some of the Many Women Pioneers in Computing: Ada Byron King - Portrait .Countess of Lovelace and daughter of the British poet, Lord Byron (1815-1852). - Ada was a mathematician and wrote extensive notes on Charles Babbage's calculating machine and suggested how the engine might calculate Bernoulli numbers. This plan, is now regarded as the first "computer program."Sketch of the Engine and notes by Ada Byron King, Countess of Lovelace. A software language developed by the U.S. Department of Defense was named "Ada" in her honor in 1979. Edith Clarke (1883-1959) - At MIT, in June 1919, Clarke received the first Electrical Engineering degree awarded to a woman . She developed and disseminated mathematical methods that simplified calculations and reduced the time spent in solving problems in the design and operation of electrical power systems. Grace Murray Hopper (1906-1992) - Hopper earned an MA in 1930 and a Ph.D. in 1934 in Mathematics, from Yale University. She retired from the Navy in 1967 with the rank of Rear Admiral. Hopper created a compiler system that translated mathematical code into machine language. Later versions, under her direction, the compiler became the forerunner to modern programming languages. She pioneered the integration of English into programs with the FLOW-MATIC. Hopper received the Computer Sciences "Man of The Year Award" in 1969. She was the first woman to be inducted into the Distinguished Fellow British Computer Society in 1973. The term "bug," an error or defect in software that causes a program to malfunction, originated, according to computer folklore, when Grace and her team found a dead moth that had been "zapped" by the relay and caused the device to fail. Erna Hoover - invented a computerized switching system for telephone traffic. For this achievement, she was awarded the first software patent ever issued (Patent #3,623,007) on Nov. 23, 1971). She was the first female supervisor of a technical department (at Bell Labs). Kay McNulty Mauchly Antonelli and Alice Burks - made calculations for tables of firing and bombing trajectories, as part of the war effort. This work prompted the development, in 1946, of the ENIAC, the world's first electronic digital computer. Adele Goldstine - assisted in the creation of the ENIAC and wrote the manual to use it. Joan Margaret Winters - scientific programmer in SLAC Computing Services at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, among other achievements. Alexandra Illmer Forsythe (1918-1980) - .During the 1960's and 1970's, she co-authored a series of textbooks on computer science. She wrote the first computer science textbook. Evelyn Boyd Granville - was one of the first African American women to earn a Ph.D. in Mathematics. During her career, she developed computer programs that were used for trajectory analysis in the Mercury Project (the first U.S. manned mission in space) and in the Apollo Project (which sent U.S. astronauts to the moon). See Past Notable Women of Computing for more details
Timelines:
List of links Online Cyber Resources and Scholarship | Bibliography of Cyberbooks / Theory |
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