Title: History of Information and Technology Systems
1History of Information and Technology Systems
- Those who do not Learn from history are
destined to repeat it - George Santayana
2- Learning Objectives
- When you have finished discussing this lesson,
you will be able to - 1. Understand how computer technology has
evolved. - 2. Identify key people in the development of
computers. - 3. Explain the main differences among the
generations of computers. - 4. Discuss trends in the development of
computers.
3Four basic periods
- Characterized by a principal technology used to
solve the input, processing, output and
communication problems of the time - Premechanical
- Mechanical
- Electromechanical
- Electronic
4The Premechanical Age (3000 B.C. - 1450 A.D.)
- Simple mechanism powered by hand due to the
absence of electricity and adequate industrial
technology.
5- 1. Writing and Alphabets--communication.
- a. First humans communicated only through
speaking and simple drawings known as
petroglyths (signs or simple figures carved in
rock). - Many of these are pictographs pictures or
sketches that visually resemble that which is
depicted. - E.g.,
- cave painting from Lascaux, France, c.
15,000- 10,000 BC prehistoric petroglythic
imagery from Western U.S.
6- E.g., cave painting from Lascaux, France, c.
15,000-10,000 BC
7- E.g., prehistoric petroglythic imagery from
Western U.S. -
- Geometric signs (dots, squares, etc.) with no
apparent depicted object ideographs (symbols to
represent ideas or concepts.)
8- b. First development of signs corresponding to
spoken sounds, instead of pictures, to express
words. - Starting in 3100 B.C., the Sumerians in
Mesopotamia (southern Iraq) devised cuneiform --
the first true written language and the first
real information system. - Pronounced "coo-nay-eh-form"
- Cuneiform's evolutionEarly pictographic tablet
(3100 B.C.), (2500 -2800 B.C) , (2100 B.C.)
9- Early pictographic tablet (3100 B.C.).
10Pictographs were turned on their sides (2800
B.C.) and then developed into actual cuneiform
symbols (2500 B.C.) -- as this clay tablet
illustrates.
- Pictographs for star (which also meant heaven or
god), head, and water (on the left) were turned
on their side (in the middle), and eventually
became cuneiform symbols (on right).
11- A cuneiform table (c. 2100 B.C.) listing
expenditures of grain and animals.
12- c. Around 2000 B.C., Phoenicians created
symbols that expressed single syllables and
consonants (the first true alphabet). - d. The Greeks later adopted the Phoenician
alphabet and added vowels the Romans gave the
letters Latin names to create the alphabet we use
today.
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14- 2. Paper and Pens--input technologies.
- Sumerians' input technology was a stylus that
could scratch marks in wet clay. - About 2600 B.C., the Egyptians wrote on the
papyrus plant - Around 100 A.D., the Chinese made paper from
rags, on which modern-day papermaking is based,
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16- 3. Books and Libraries--output technologies
(permanent storage devices). - Religious leaders in Mesopotamia kept the
earliest "books" - The Egyptians kept scrolls.
- Around 600 B.C., the Greeks began to fold sheets
of papyrus vertically into leaves and bind them
together.
17- 4. The First Numbering Systems.
- a. Egyptian system
- The numbers 1-9 as vertical lines, the number 10
as a U or circle, the number 100 as a coiled
rope, and the number 1,000 as a lotus blossom. - b. The first numbering systems similar to those
in use today were invented between 100 and 200
A.D. by Hindus in India who created a nine-digit
numbering system. - Around 875 A.D., the concept of zero was
developed. - 5. The First Calculators The Abacus.
18- Abacus
- The first manual data device developed in China
in the 12th century A.D.. - The device has a frame with beads strung on
wires and arithmetic calculations are performed
by manipulating the beads
19The Mechanical Age 1450 - 1840
- During this centuries, Europeans created several
calculating machines that made use of existing
technology, specifically clockwork gears and
levers.
20- 1. The First Information Explosion.
- Johann Gutenberg (Mainz, Germany c. 1387-1468)
- Invented the movable metal-type printing process
in 1450. - The development of book indexes and the
widespread use of page numbers. - 2. The first general purpose "computers"
- Actually people who held the job title "computer
one who works with numbers." - 3. Slide Rules, the Pascaline and Leibniz's
Machine - 4. Babbages Engine
21- Slide Rule
- Early 1600s, William Oughtred, an English
clergyman, invented the slide rule - Early example of an analog computer.
22 23 24 25- PASCALINE
- Invented by Blaise Pascal (1623-62), a French
- mathematician
- One of the first mechanical computing machines,
- around 1642.
- capable of adding and subtracting numbers
containing - up to eight digits
- operated by dialing series of wheels
- approximately the size of a cigar box
- hand-cranked mechanical gear system
- Performed computation by counting integers
26Blaise Pascal (1623-62)
27- Leibniz's Machine.
- Invented by Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz
(1646-1716), German mathematician and
philosopher. - Capable of addition, subtraction, multiplication,
division and extract square roots.
28Wilhelm von Leibniz (1646-1716),
29- 4. Babbage Engine
- Invented by Charles Babbage (1792-1871),
eccentric English mathematician. Considered the
father of computer because his invention became
the basis for modern computational devices. - The Difference Engine (1822)
- Designed to standard procedure for calculating
the roots of polynomials. - The Analytical Engine
- Designed to use two types of cards operation
card and variable cards.
30- Joseph Marie Jacquard's loom
- Designed during the 1830s
- Parts remarkably similar to modern-day computers.
- The "store"
- The "mill"
- Punch cards.
- Punch card idea picked up by Babbage from Joseph
Marie Jacquard's (1752-1834) loom. - Introduced in 1801.
- Binary logic
- Fixed program that would operate in real time.
- Augusta Ada Byron (1815-52).
- She wrote a demonstration program for the
Analytic Engine, prompting many to refer her as
the first programmer.
31Charles Babbage (1792-1871)
32Working model created in 1822. The "method of
differences".
The Difference Engine.
33The Analytical Engine.
- The machine was designed to use a form of punched
card similar to Jacquard's punched cards for data
input. - This device would have been a full-fledged modern
computer with a recognizable IPOS cycle (input,
processing, output, and storage). - the technology during this time could not produce
the parts required to complete the analytical
engine.
34Joseph Marie Jacquard's loom.
35Augusta Ada Byron
36Electromechanical Age 1840 - 1940.
- The discovery of ways to harness electricity was
the key advance made during this period.
Knowledge and information could now be converted
into electrical impulses.
37- 1. The Beginnings of Telecommunication.
- a. Voltaic Battery.
- Late 18th century.
- b. Telegraph.
- Early 1800s.
- c. Morse Code.
- Developed in1835 by Samuel Morse
- Dots and dashes.
- d. Telephone and Radio.
- e. Followed by the discovery that electrical
waves travel through space and can produce an
effect far from the point at which they
originated. - f. These two events led to the invention of the
radio - Guglielmo Marconi
- 1894
38- 2. Electromechanical Computing
- a. Herman Hollerith and IBM. -
Herman Hollerith (1860-1929) in - 1880
- - Census Machine
- - Early punch cards
- - Punch card workers
- By 1890
- The International Business Machines
Corporation (IBM). - Its first logo
- b. Mark 1
39Alexander Graham Bell. 1876
40- He founded the Tabulating Machine Company in 1896
- Tabulating Machine Company merged with two other
companies to form the Computing-Tabulating-Recordi
ng Company
Dr. Herman Hollerith
41Census Machine
42Early punch cards
43- 1924, the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company
became International Business Machines
Corporation (IBM). - marketing expert named Thomas Watson Sr (Business
partner of Hollerith
44Mark 1
Paper tape stored data and program instructions.
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46- Howard Aiken, a Ph.D. student at Harvard
University Built the Mark I - Completed January 1942
- 8 feet tall, 51 feet long, 2 feet thick, weighed
5 tons - used about 750,000 parts
- slow, taking 3 to 5 seconds to perform a single
multiplication operation
47The Electronic Age 1940 - Present
- The first electronic computers were complex
machines that required large investments to build
and use. The computer industry might never have
developed without government support and funding
48- 1. First Tries.
- - Early 1940s
- - Electronic vacuum tubes.
- 2. Dr. John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert
- a. The First High-Speed, General-Purpose
Computer Using Vacuum Tubes Electronic
Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) - b. The First Stored-Program Computer(s) - Early
1940s, Mauchly and Eckert began to design the
EDVAC - the Electronic Discreet Variable
Computer. - - John von Neumann's influential report in June
1945 "The Report on the EDVAC" -
49- British scientists used this report and outpaced
the Americans. - - Max Newman headed up the effort at
Manchester - University
- Where the Manchester Mark I went into operation
in June 1948--becoming the first stored-program
computer. - Maurice Wilkes, a British scientist at Cambridge
University, - completed the EDSAC (Electronic Delay Storage
- Automatic Calculator) in 1949--two years
before EDVAC - was finished.
- EDSAC became the first stored-program computer
in general use (i.e., not a prototype).
50- c. The First General-Purpose Computer for
Commercial Use Universal Automatic Computer
(UNIVAC). - Late 1940s, Eckert and Mauchly began the
development of a computer called UNIVAC
(Universal Automatic Computer) - Remington Rand.
- First UNIVAC delivered to Census Bureau in 1951.
- a machine called LEO (Lyons Electronic Office)
went into action a few months before UNIVAC and
became the world's first commercial computer.
51- 3. The Four Generations of Digital Computing.
- a. The First Generation (1951-1958).
- - Vacuum tubes as their main logic elements.
- - Punch cards to input and externally store
data. - - Rotating magnetic drums for internal storage
of data and programs - Programs written in
- Machine language
- Assembly language
- Requires a compiler.
52- b. The Second Generation (1959-1963).
- - Vacuum tubes replaced by transistors as
main logic element. - ATT's Bell Laboratories, in the 1940s
- Crystalline mineral materials called
semiconductors could be used in the design of a
device called a transistor - - Magnetic tape and disks began to replace
punched cards as external storage devices. - - Magnetic cores (very small donut-shaped
magnets that could be polarized in one of two
directions to represent data) strung on wire
within the computer became the primary internal
storage technology. - High-level programming languages
- E.g., FORTRAN and COBOL
53- c. The Third Generation (1964-1979).
- 1. Individual transistors were replaced by
integrated circuits. - 2. Magnetic tape and disks completely replace
punch cards as external storage devices. - 3. Magnetic core internal memories began to give
way to a new form, metal oxide semiconductor
(MOS) memory, which, like integrated circuits,
used silicon-backed chips. - - Operating systems
- - Advanced programming languages like BASIC
developed. - Which is where Bill Gates and Microsoft got their
start in 1975.
54- d. The Fourth Generation (1979- Present).
- 1. Large-scale and very large-scale integrated
circuits (LSIs and VLSICs) - 2. Microprocessors that contained memory, logic,
and control circuits (an entire CPU Central
Processing Unit) on a single chip.
55- Which allowed for home-use personal computers or
PCs, like the Apple (II and Mac) and IBM PC. - Apple II released to public in 1977, by Stephen
Wozniak and Steven Jobs. - First Apple Mac released in 1984.
- IBM PC introduced in 1981.
- Debuts with MS-DOS (Microsoft Disk Operating
System) - Fourth generation language software products
- E.g., Visicalc, Lotus 1-2-3, dBase, Microsoft
Word, and many others. - Graphical User Interfaces (GUI) for PCs arrive in
early 1980s - MS Windows debuts in 1983, but is quite a
clunker.
56Vacuum tubes could multiply two ten-digit numbers
forty times per second.
57- The ENIAC team (Feb 14, 1946). Left to right J.
Presper Eckert, Jr. John Grist Brainerd Sam
Feltman Herman H. Goldstine John W. Mauchly
Harold Pender Major General G. L. Barnes
Colonel Paul N. Gillon.
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59- Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer
(ENIAC) 1946. - Used vacuum tubes (not mechanical devices) to do
its calculations. - first electronic computer.
- Developers John Mauchly, a physicist, and J.
Prosper Eckert, an electrical engineer -
- But it could not store its programs (its set of
instructions)
60 - ENIAC used 18,000 vacuum tubes, and it is said
that the lights would dim in Philadelphia
whenever ENIAC was turned on. ENIAC was 10 feet
high, 10 feet wide, and 100 feet long.
61The Manchester University Mark I (prototype)
First Stored-Program Computer(s)
62The First General-Purpose Computer for Commercial
Use Universal Automatic Computer (UNIVAC).
63This UNIVAC I was a commercial version of the
ENIAC.
64UNIVAC publicity photo
65Magnetic drums provided secondary storage for
first-generation computers.
66The transistor was invented by John Bardeen,
Walter Brattain, and William Shockley of Bell
Telephone Laboratories
67Magnetic core memory reduces calculation times
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70Integrated circuits are shown here with first-generation vacuum tubes and second-generation transistors.
71The two Steves--Steve Jobs (in the white sweater and red shirt) and Steve Wozniak--are holding the Apple I board.
Apple II released to public in 1977, by Stephen
Wozniak and Steven Jobs. Initially sold for
1,195 (without a monitor) had 16k RAM.
72The IBM PC
73Apple's GUI (on the first Mac) debuts in 1984,
74MS Windows debuts in 1983, but is quite a
clunker.
75Windows wouldn't take off until version 3 was
released in 1990
76Four Stages, or Generations, of Computer
Development
Generation Years Circuitry Characterized By
First 1951 - 1959 Vacuum tubes Magnetic drum and magnetic tape difficult to program used machine language and assembly language
Second 1959 - 1963 Transistors Magnetic cores and magnetic disk used high-level languages and were easier to program
Third 1963 - 1975 Integrated circuit Minicomputer accessible by multiple users from remote terminals
Fourth 1975 - present VLSI and microprocessor chip Personal computer and user-friendly microprocessor programs very high-level language chip object-oriented programming (OOP)
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