History of computers

Computing hardware evolved from

machines that needed separate manual

action to perform each arithmetic

operation, to punched card machines,

and then to stored-program computers.

The history of stored-program

computers relates first to computer

architecture, that is, the organization of

the units to perform input and output,

to store data and to operate as an

integrated mechanism.

Before the development of the general-

purpose computer, most calculations

were done by humans. Mechanical tools

to help humans with digital calculations

were then called"calculating machines",

by proprietary names, or even as they

are now, calculators. It was those

humans who used the machines who

were then called computers. Aside from

written numerals, the first aids to

computation were purely mechanical

devices which required the operator to

set up the initial values of an

elementary arithmetic operation, then

manipulate the device to obtain the

result. A sophisticated (and

comparatively recent) example is the

slide rule in which numbers are

represented as lengths on a logarithmic

scale and computation is performed by

setting a cursor and aligning sliding

scales, thus adding those lengths.

Numbers could be represented in a

continuous"analog"form, for instance

a voltage or some other physical

property was set to be proportional to

the number. Analog computers, like

those designed and built by Vannevar

Bush before World War II were of this

type. Numbers could be represented in

the form of digits, automatically

manipulated by a mechanical

mechanism. Although this last approach

required more complex mechanisms in

many cases, it made for greater

precision of results.

The invention of electronic amplifiers

made calculating machines much faster

than their mechanical or

electromechanic -al predecessors.

Vacuum tube (thermionic valve)

amplifiers gave way to solid state

transistors, and then rapidly to

integrated circuits which continue to

improve, placing millions of electrical

switches (typically transistors) on a

single elaborately manufactured piece

of semi-conductor the size of a

fingernail. By defeating the tyranny of

numbers, integrated circuits made high-

speed and low-cost digital computers a

widespread commodity. There is an

ongoing effort to make computer

hardware faster, cheaper, and capable

of storing more data.

Computing hardware has become a

platform for uses other than mere

computation, such as process

automation, electronic communications,

equipment control, entertainment,

education, etc. Each field in turn has

imposed its own requirements on the

hardware, which has evolved in

response to those requirements, such

as the role of the touch screen to create

a more intuitive and natural user

interface.

As all computers rely on digital storage,

and tend to be limited by the size and

speed of memory, the history of

computer data storage is tied to the

development of computers.

Earliest true hardware

Devices have been used to aid

computation for thousands of years,

mostly using one-to-one

correspondence with our fingers. The

earliest counting device was probably

form of tally stick. Later record keeping

aids throughout the Fertile Crescent

included calculi (clay spheres, cones,

etc.) which represented counts of items,

probably livestock or grains. The use of counting

rods is one example.

The abacus was early used for

arithmetic tasks. What we now call the

Roman abacus was used in Babylonia

as early as 2400 BC. Since then, many

other forms of reckoning boards or

tables have been invented. In a

medieval European counting house, a

checkered cloth would be placed on a

table, and markers moved around on it

according to certain rules, as an aid to

calculating sums of money.

Several analog computers were

constructed in ancient and medieval

times to perform astronomical

calculations. These include the

Antikythera mechanism and the

astrolabe from ancient Greece (c. 150–

100 BC), which are generally regarded

as the earliest known mechanical

analog computers.Hero of Alexandria

(c. 10–70 AD) made many complex

mechanical devices including automata

and a programmable cart. Other

early versions of mechanical devices

used to perform one or another type of

calculations include the planisphere and

other mechanical computing devices

invented by Abū Rayhān al-Bīrūnī (c. AD

1000); the equatorium and universal

latitude-indepe -ndent astrolabe by Abū

Ishāq Ibrāhīm al-Zarqālī (c. AD 1015);

the astronomical analog computers of

other medieval Muslim astronomers

and engineers; and the astronomical

clock tower of Su Song (c. AD 1090)

during the Song Dynasty.Scottis -h mathematician and physicist

John Napier noted multiplication and

division of numbers could be

performed by addition and subtraction,

respectively, of logarithms of those

numbers. While producing the first

logarithmic tables Napier needed to

perform many multiplications -, and it

was at this point that he designed

Napier's bones, an abacus-like device

used for multiplication and division.

Since real numbers can be represented

as distances or intervals on a line, the

slide rule was invented in the 1620s to

allow multiplication and division

operations to be carried out

significantly faster than was previously

possible.Slide rules were used by

generations of engineers and other

mathematically involved professional

workers, until the invention of the

pocket calculator.
Wilhelm Schickard, a German polymath,
designed a calculating clock in 1623. It
made use of a single-tooth gear that
was not an adequate solution for a
general carry mechanism. A fire destroyed the machine during its
construction in 1624 and Schickard
abandoned the project. Two sketches
of it were discovered in 1957, too late
to have any impact on the development
of mechanical calculators. In 1642, while still a teenager, Blaise
Pascal started some pioneering work
on calculating machines and after three
years of effort and 50 prototypes
he invented the mechanical
calculator. He built twenty of these machines (called Pascal's
Calculator or Pascaline) in the following
ten years. Nine Pascalines have
survived, most of which are on display
in European museums.Gottfried Wilhelm
von Leibniz invented the Stepped Reckoner and his famous
cylinders around 1672 while adding
direct multiplication and division to the
Pascaline. Leibniz once said "It is
unworthy of excellent men to lose
hours like slaves in the labour of calculation which could safely be
relegated to anyone else if machines
were used."
Around 1820, Charles Xavier Thomas de
Colmar created the first successful,
mass-produced mechanical calculator, the Thomas Arithmometer, that could
add, subtract, multiply, and divide.
It was mainly based on Leibniz' work.
Mechanical calculators, like the base-ten
addiator, the comptometer, the Monroe,
the Curta and the Addo-X remained in use until the 1970s. Leibniz also
described the binary numeral
system, a central ingredient of all
modern computers. However, up to the
1940s, many subsequent designs
(including Charles Babbage's machines of the 1822 and even ENIAC of 1945)
were based on the decimal system;
ENIAC's ring counters emulated the
operation of the digit wheels of a
mechanical adding machine.
In Japan, Ryoichi Yazu patented a mechanical calculator called the Yazu
Arithmometer in 1903. It consisted of a
single cylinder and 22 gears, and
employed the mixed base-2 and base-5
number system familiar to users to the
soroban (Japanese abacus). Carry and end of calculation were determined
automatically. More than 200 units
were sold, mainly to government
agencies such as the Ministry of War
and agricultural experiment
stations.


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