History

Nearly 5,000 years ago the abacus emerged in Asia
Minor. The abacus may be considered the first computer. This device allowed
its users to make computations using a system of sliding beads arranged on a rack.
Early shopkeepers used the abacus to keep up with transactions. The use of pencil
and paper spread, the abacus lost its importance. Nearly twelve centuries past
before the next important advance in computing devices emerged.
In 1642, Blaise Pascal, the 18-year-old son of a French tax collector,
invented what he called a numerical wheel calculator to help his father with
his duties. The Pascaline, a brass rectangular box, used eight movable dials
to add sums up to eight figures long. Pascal's device used a base of ten to
achieve this. The disadvantage to the Pascaline, of course, was its limitation
to addition. In 1694, Gottfried Wilhem von Leibniza a German mathematician and
philosopher improved the Pascaline by creating a machine that could also multiply.
Like its predecessor, Leibniz's mechanical multiplier worked by a system of
gears and dials.
It wasn't until 1820, however, that mechanical calculators gained widespread
use. A Frenchman, Charles Xavier Thomas de Colmar, invented a machine that could
perform the four basic mathematic functions. The arithometer, presented a more
systematic approach to computing because it could add, subtract, multiply and
divide. With its enhanced versatility, the arithometer was widely used up until
World War I.
The real beginnings of computers began with an English mathematics professor,
Charles Babbage. Babbage's steam-powered Engine, outlined the basic elements
of a modern general purpose computer and was a breakthrough concept. The Analytical
Engine consisted of over 50,000 components. The basic design of included
input devices in the form of perforated cards containing operating instructions
and a "store" for memory of 1,000 numbers of up to 50 decimal digits long.
In 1889, an American inventor, Herman Hollerith, created a machine that used
cards to store data information which was fed into a machine and compiled the
results mechanically. Each punch on a card represented one number, and combinations
of two punches represented one letter. As many as 80 variables could be stored
on a single card. Hollerith brought his punch card reader into the
business world, founding Tabulating Machine Company in 1896, later to become
International Business Machines (IBM) in 1924 after a series of mergers. Other
companies also manufactured punch readers for business use. Both business and
government used punch cards for data processing until the 1960's.
When World War II began, the governments sought to develop computers to accomplishment
their potential strategic importance. This increased funding for computer development
projects and hastened technical progress. In 1941, a German engineer Konrad
Zuse had developed a computer to design airplanes and missiles. The Allied forces,
however, made greater strides in developing powerful computers. American efforts
produced a broader achievement. In 1933, Howard H. Aiken, a Harvard engineer
working with IBM, succeeded in producing an all-electronic calculator. The purpose
of the computer was to create ballistic charts for the U.S. Navy. It was about
half as long as a football field and contained about 500 miles of wiring. It
used electromagnetic signals to move mechanical parts. The machine was slow
taking 3-5 seconds per calculation and inflexible in that sequences of calculations
could not change; but it could perform basic arithmetic as well as more complex
equations.
Another computer development spurred by the war was the Electronic Numerical
Integrator and Computer (ENIAC). It consisted of 18,000 vacuum tubes,
70,000 resistors and 5 million soldered joints, the computer was such a massive
piece of machinery that it consumed 160 kilowatts of electrical power. ENIAC
was developed by John Presper Eckert and John W. Mauchl. ENIAC was a general-purpose
computer.
In 1945, Von Neumann designed the Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic Computer
(EDVAC) with a memory to hold both a stored program as well as data. This "stored
memory" technique as well as the "conditional control transfer," that allowed
the computer to be stopped at any point and then resumed, allowed for greater
versatility in computer programming. The key element to the von Neumann architecture
was the central processing unit, which allowed all computer functions to be
coordinated through a single source. In 1951, the UNIVAC I (Universal Automatic
Computer), built by Remington Rand, became one of the first commercially available
computers to take advantage of these advances. The first computers were characterized
by the fact that operating instructions were made-to-order for the specific
task for which the computer was to be used. Each computer had a different binary-coded
program called a machine language that told it how to operate. This made the
computer difficult to program and limited its versatility and speed. Other unique
features of first computers were the use of vacuum tubes and magnetic
drums for data storage.
The invention of the transistor greatly changed the computer's development in
1948. The transistor replaced the large, cumbersome vacuum tubes. The transistor
was at work in the computer by 1956. Throughout the early 1960's, there were
a number of commercially successful computers used in business, universities,
and government from companies such as Burroughs, Honeywell, IBM, and others.
These computers also contained transistors in place of vacuum tubes. They also
contained all the components we associate with the modern day computer: printers,
disk storage, memory, tape storage, operating systems, and stored programs.
By 1965, most large business routinely processed financial information using computers.
It was the stored program and programming language that gave computers
the flexibility to finally be cost effective and productive for business use.
Though transistors were clearly an improvement over the vacuum tube, they still
generated a great deal of heat, which damaged the computer's sensitive internal
parts. Jack Kilby, an engineer with Texas Instruments, developed the integrated
circuit in 1958. The IC combined three electronic components onto a small silicon
disc, which was made from quartz. Scientists later managed to fit even more components
on a single chip, called a semiconductor.
By the 1980's, very large scale integration squeezed hundreds of thousands of
components onto a chip. Ultra-large scale integration increased that number
into the millions. The ability to fit so much onto an area about half the size
of a dime helped diminish the size and price of computers. It also increased
their power, efficiency and reliability. By the mid-1970's, computer manufacturers
sought to bring computers to general consumers. These minicomputers came complete
with user-friendly software packages that offered even non-technical users an
arrangement of applications, most popularly word processing and spreadsheet
programs..
In 1981, IBM introduced its personal computer (PC) for use in the home,
office and schools. The 1980's saw an expansion in computer use in all three
arenas as clones of the IBM PC made the personal computer even more affordable.
The number of personal computers in use more than doubled from 2 million in
1981 to 5.5 million in 1982. Ten years later, 65 million PCs were being used.
As computers became more widespread in the workplace, new ways to harness their
potential developed. As smaller computers became more powerful, they could be
linked together, or networked, to share memory space, software, information
and communicate with each other. Computers continue to grow smaller and more
powerful.