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How The Computer Came About

How The Computer Came About. Created and designed by Rachel :). The Computer.

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How The Computer Came About

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  1. How The Computer Came About Created and designed by Rachel:)

  2. The Computer When asking who invented the computer, it may seem more simple of a question than it actually is. A computer isn’t just one machine someone invented, it’s a whole complex system of mini-machines that different people made and put together. But whose idea was the computer, you ask? Why, it was Charles Babbage of course! In 1840 he invented a machine he called the “Analytical Engine,” but the first computer wasn’t actually made until 100 years later. The first electro-mechanical computer, or Mark I, was used in World War 2 by the U.S. Navy and it was huge. It weighed about 5 tons! That’s tenthousand pounds! Charles Babbage

  3. Debugging Although the name is misleading, when it comes to computers debugging doesn’t have anything to do with critters that crawl around on many legs. When you debug a computer, it means that you try to find a reduce the number of bugs, or defects, that a program has in it. The term “debugging” came about in the late 1940’s by Grace Hopper. When she and a team were working on the Mark II they found a moth stuck in the relay and, jokingly, she remarked that they were “debugging” it and the name stuck. :)

  4. The Internet The internet was originally invented in 1978 by an American computer scientist named Vinton Cerf as part of a project sponsored by the United States Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or the ARPA because they wanted communication between computers to be easier and more convenient. It began as a network that connected computers at research laboratories and universities, but became world wide in 1989 by an English computer scientist named Timothy Berners-Lee. The Internet is just like the Universe.

  5. Babbage’s Analytical Engine The analytical engine was created in 1837 by Charles Babbage. Although it was made in 1837, Babbage continued to refine and improve the analytical engine until his death in 1871. The Analytical Engine was going to be the world’s first programmable computer. It was supposed to be able to not only solve one problem, but an entire range of calculations. According to Wikipedia, the analytical engine was never actually built because of “the complexity of the machine, the lack of project management science, the expense of its construction, and the difficulty of assessing its value by Parliament relative to other projects being lobbied for.” Even if building the machine had been possible, it would have been very dangerous and roughly the size of a train engine.

  6. Herman Hollerith The first commercial data processing machines were punched card tabulating systems that were invented by Herman Hollerith. Herman worked for the U.S. Census Bureau and during that time he began to design machines that reduced the time that would be collected in the Census of a county experiencing a rapid growth in population. Herman Hollerith and the Tabulating System

  7. ENIAC Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer, or just ENIAC, was the first general electronic computer. It was capable of being reprogrammed so it would be able to solve a large amount of computing problems. It was made to calculate artillery and firing tables for the U.S. Army’s Ballistic Research Laboratories, but was used for calculations having to do with the hydrogen bomb. Building the computer began in July of 1943 in secret by the University of Pennsylvania’s Moore School of Electrical Engineering under the codename “Project PX” and was completed in February of 1946. The ENIAC

  8. What is a program? This one is very simple. A program is a piece of software that is like instructions for the computer.

  9. Transistorsvs.Vacuum Tubes A replica of the first transistor. Transistors win this fight. One, vacuum tubes were huge. Two: Vacuum tubes produced a lot of heat making whatever was using them real hot and the object around them got hot, too. The first electronic computer used hundreds and hundreds of vacuum tubes and were being repaired as often as they were being used. They were so big that they filled large rooms and required a lot of electricity. Vacuum Tubes

  10. Microcomputers In 1975 Ed Roberts, the “father of the microcomputer,” created the microcomputer or, as we call it today, the PC. A microcomputer is a computer with a microprocessor as its central processing unit and although it is much smaller than the first computers ever made, it much more complex. It was produced by Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems, or MITS. Ed Roberts and a microcomputer

  11. What is the binary system? “Binary” means a system that has only two possible digits. For example, the word “decimal” describes a system that can only have ten possible digits which are the digits 0-9. Each number in the decimal system is a combination of those ten digits. The binary system works basically the same way except that there are only two digits instead of ten. Those two digits are 0 and 1. Every number in the binary system is a combination of these two numbers. A bit is a single digit in the binary system that encodes a single unit of information. A byte is a sequence of bits. Usually, eight bits equal on byte. Bits are grouped into byte to increase the efficiency of the computer hardware such as network equipment, disks, and memory.

  12. Resources! :D Information: http://www.invention-ifia.ch/computer_age_and_the_inventor.htm http://inventors.about.com/library/blcoindex.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debugging http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventions/internet.htm http://www.boutell.com/newfaq/history/inventednetwhy.html http://www.kerryr.net/pioneers/babbage.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analytical_engine http://www.officemuseum.com/data_processing_machines.htm http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-tabulating-machine.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Who_invented_the_first_microcomputer http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcomputer http://www.pcnineoneone.com/howto/binary1.html http://compnetworking.about.com/cs/basicnetworking/f/bitsandbytes.htm http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100831151856AA3NjCT http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/computer_program Pictures: http://www.onlinemathtutor.org/help/mathematicians/charles-babbage-famous-mathematicians-2/ http://www.asp.net/data-access/tutorials/debugging-stored-procedures-vb http://www.thedailyinquirer.net/011110-or-011110-another-2010-date-palindrome/018233 http://www.retroist.com/2010/04/05/retroist-access-monday-ram-–-dr-ed-roberts-father-of-the-pc-dies-at-68/ http://www.math.ntnu.no/~ronquist/kurs/super/2004h/lectureplan.html http://www.radford.edu/wkovarik/class/design/designhist/index.html http://www.chronarion.org/ada/

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