The History and Future of Computers
With the advances in computer technology it is now possible for more and more
Canadians to have personal computers in their homes. With breakthroughs in computer
processing speeds and with computer storage capacity, the combination of this with the
reduced size of the computer have allowed for even the smallest apartment to hold a
computer. In the past the only places to have computers were military institutes and
some universities; this was because of their immense size and price. Today with falling
computer prices and the opportunity to access larger networks, the amount of computers
has grown from just 10% in 1986 to 25% in 1994. Also, of the 25%, 34% of them were
equipped with modems, which allow for connection to on line services via telephone
lines.
The primitive start of the computer came about around 4000 BC; with the invention of
the abacus, by the Chinese. It was a rack with beads strung on wires that could be moved
to make calculations. The first digital computer is usually accredited to Blaise Pascal.
In 1642 he made the device to aid his father, who was a tax collector. In 1694
Gottfried Leibniz improved the machine so that with the rearrangement of a few parts it
could be used to multiply. The next logical advance came from Thomas of Colmar in 1890,
who produced a machine that could perform all of the four basic operations, addition,
subtraction, multiplication and division. With the added versatility this device was in
operation up until the First World War.
Thomas of Colmar made the common calculator, but the real start of computers as they
are known today comes from Charles Babbage. Babbage designed a machine that he called a
Difference Engine. It was designed to make many long calculations automatically and
print out the results. A working model was built in 1822 and fabrication began in
Gash 2
1823. Babbage works on his invention for 10 years when he lost interest in it. His loss
of interest was caused by a new idea he thought up. The Difference Engine was limited in
adaptability as well as applicability. The new idea would be a general purpose,
automatic mechanical digital computer that would be fully program controlled. He called
this the Analytical Engine. It would have Conditional Control Transfer Capability so
that commands could be inputted in any order, not just the way that it had been
programmed. The machine was supposed to use punch cards which were to be read into the
machine from several reading stations. The machine was supposed to operate automatically
by steam power and only require one person there to operate it. Babbages machines were
never completed for reasons such as, non-precise machining techniques, the interest of
few people and the steam power required for the devices was not readily available.
The next advance in computing came from Herman Hollerith and James Powers. They
made devices that were able to read cards that information had been punched into,
automatically. This advance was a huge step, because it provided memory storage
capability. Companies such as IBM and Remington made improved versions of the machine
that lasted for over fifty years.
ENIAC which was thought up in 1942, was in use from 1946 to 1955. Thought up by J.
Presper Eckert and his associates. The computer was the first high-speed digital
computer and was one thousand times faster than its predecessor, the relay computers.
ENIAC was very bulky, taking up 1,800 square feet on the floor and having 18,000 vacuum
tubes. It was also very limited in programmability, but it was very efficient in the
programs that it had been designed for.
In 1945 John von Neumann along with the University of Pennsylvania came up with what
is known as the stored-program technique. Also due to the increasing speed of the
computer subroutines needed to be repeated so that the computer could be kept busy. It
Gash 3 would also be better if instructions to the computer could
be changed during a compution so that there would be a different outcome in the
compution. Neumann fulfilled these needs by creating a command that is called a
conditional control transfer. The conditional control transfer allows for program
sequences to be started and stopped at any time. Instruction programs were also stored
together so that they can be arithmetically changed just like data. This generation of
computers included ones using RAM, as well as the first commercially available computers,
EDVAC and UNIVAC. These computers used punched-card or punched tape reading devices.
Also some of the later ones were only about the size of a grand piano and contained 2,500
electron tubes, which was much smaller than ENIAC.
During the fifties and sixties the two most important advances were magnetic core
memory and the transistor. These discoveries increased RAM sizes from 8,000 to 64,000
words in commercially available computers. The first supercomputers were made with this
new technology. During this period successful commercial computers were made by
Burroughs, IBM, Sperry-Rand, Honeywell and Control Data. These computers could now have
printers, disk storage, tape storage, stored programs and memory operating systems.
These computers were usually owned by industry, government and private laboratories.
The next advance came in the form of a chip. Transistors and vacuum tubes created
vast amounts of heat and this damaged the delicate internal parts of the computer. The
heat problem was eliminated through quartz. The integrated circuit made in 1958
consisted of three components placed on a silicon disc that was made of quartz. As
technology advanced more and more components were fit onto indiviual chips and this
resulted in smaller and smaller computers. There was also an operating system created
during this stage that allowed for many programs to be run at once, with one central
program that had the ability to monitor and coordinate computer memory.
|