word
"computer" was first used
The word "computer" was first recorded as being
used in 1613 and was originally was used to
describe a human who performed calculations or computations. The definition of
a computer remained the same until the end of the 19th century when people
began to realize machines never get tired and can perform calculations much
faster and more accurately than any team of human computers ever could.
First
mechanical computer or automatic computing engine concept
In 1822, Charles Babbage purposed and began
developing the Difference Engine,
considered to be the first automatic computing engine that was capable of
computing several sets of numbers and making a hard copies of the results.
Unfortunately, because of funding he was never able to complete a full-scale
functional version of this machine. In June of 1991,
the London Science Museum completed the Difference Engine No 2 for the
bicentennial year of Babbage's birth and later completed the printing mechanism
in 2000.
Later, in 1837 Charles
Babbage proposed the first general mechanical computer, the Analytical Engine. The Analytical
Engine contained an Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU),
basic flow control, and integrated memory and is the first general-purpose
computer concept. Unfortunately, because of funding issues this computer was
also never built while Charles Babbage's was alive. In 1910, Henry Babbage, Charles Babbage's
youngest son was able to complete a portion of this machine and was able to
perform basic calculations.
First programmable computer
The Z1,
originally created by Germany's Konrad Zuse
in his parents living room in 1936 to 1938
and is considered to be the first electro-mechanical binary programmable
(modern) computer and really the first functional computer.
First concepts of what we consider a modern computer
The Turing machine
was first proposed by the Alan Turing
in 1936 and became the foundation for
theories about computing and computers. The machine was a device that printed
symbols on paper tape in a manner that emulated a person following a series of
logical instructions. Without these fundamentals, we wouldn't have the
computers we use today.
first electric programmable computer
The Colossus was the first electric programmable
computer and was developed by Tommy Flowers and first demonstrated in December 1943. The Colossus was created to help the
British code breakers read encrypted German messages.
first digital computer
Short for Atanasoff-Berry Computer, the ABC started being developed by Professor John Vincent Atanasoff and graduate
student Cliff Berry in 1937 and continued
to be developed until 1942 at the Iowa State College (now Iowa State
University). The ABC was an electrical computer that used vacuum tubes for digital computation
including binary math and Boolean logic
and had no CPU. On October 19, 1973, the US Federal Judge Earl R. Larson
signed his decision that the ENIAC patent by J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly
was invalid and named Atanasoff the inventor of the electronic digital
computer.
The ENIAC was
invented by J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly at the University of
Pennsylvania and began construction in 1943
and was not completed until 1946. It
occupied about 1,800 square feet and used about 18,000 vacuum tubes, weighing
almost 50 tons. Although the Judge ruled that the ABC computer was the first
digital computer, many still consider the ENIAC to be the first digital
computer because it was fully functional.
first stored program computer
The early British computer known as the EDSAC is considered to be the first stored
program electronic computer. The computer performed its first calculation on
May 6, 1949 and was the computer that ran
the first graphical computer game, nicknamed "Baby".
first computer company
The first computer company was the Electronic Controls
Company and was founded in 1949 by J.
Presper Eckert and John Mauchly, the same individuals who helped create the
ENIAC computer. The company was later renamed to EMCC or Eckert-Mauchly
Computer Corporation and released a series of mainframe computers under the UNIVAC name.
First stored program computer
First delivered to the United States Government in 1950, the UNIVAC 1101 or ERA 1101
is considered to be the first computer that was capable of storing and running
a program from memory.
First commercial computer
In 1942, Konrad Zuse
begin working on the Z4, which later became the first commercial
computer after being sold to Eduard Stiefel a mathematician of the Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology Zurich on July 12, 1950.
first PC (IBM compatible) computer
On April 7, 1953 IBM publicly introduced the 701, its first electric computer and first
mass produced computer. Later IBM introduced its first personal computer called
the IBM PC in 1981. The computer was code named and still sometimes
referred to as the Acorn and had a 8088
processor, 16 KB of memory, which was expandable to 256 and utilizing MS-DOS.
first computer with RAM
MIT introduces the Whirlwind machine on
March 8, 1955, a revolutionary computer
that was the first digital computer with magnetic
core RAM and real-time graphics.
first transistor computer
The TX-O (Transistorized Experimental computer) is the
first transistorized computer to be
demonstrated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1956.
first minicomputer
In 1960, Digital Equipment Corporation released its first
of many PDP computers the PDP-1.
first mass-market PC
In 1968, Hewlett Packard began marketing the first
mass-marketed PC, the HP 9100A.
first workstation
Although it was never sold, the first workstation is considered to be the Xerox Alto, introduced in 1974. The computer
was revolutionary for its time and included a fully functional computer,
display, and mouse. The computer operated
like many computers today utilizing windows,
menus and icons
as an interface to its operating system.
first microprocessor
Intel
introduces the first microprocessor, the Intel 4004 on November
15, 1971.
first personal computer
In 1975, Ed Roberts
coined the term "personal computer" when he introduced the Altair 8800. Although the first personal
computer is considered by many to be the Kenback-1, which was first
introduced for $750 in 1971. The computer relied on a series of switches for
inputting data and output data by turning on and off a series of lights.
The Micral is considered the be the first
commercial non-assembly computer. The computer used the Intel 8008 processor
and sold for $1,750 in 1973.
first laptop or portable computer
The IBM 5100
is the first portable computer, which was released on September 1975. The computer weighed 55 pounds and had a
five inch CRT display, tape drive, 1.9MHz PALM processor, and 64KB of RAM. In
the picture to the right, is an ad of the IBM 5100 taken from a November 1975
issue of Scientific America.
The first truly portable computer or laptop is considered to be the Osborne
I, which was released on April 1981 and developed by Adam Osborne. The Osborne I weighed 24.5
pounds, had a 5-inch display, 64 KB of memory, two 5 1/4" floppy drives,
ran the CP/M 2.2 operating system, included a modem,
and cost US$179.
The IBM PC Division (PCD)
later released the IBM portable in 1984,
it's first portable computer that weighed in at 30 pounds. Later in 1986, IBM PCD announced it's first laptop computer, the PC Convertible,
weighing 12 pounds. Finally, in 1994, IBM introduced the IBM ThinkPad 775CD,
the first notebook with an integrated CD-ROM.
first Apple computer
Steve Wozniak
designed the first Apple known as the Apple I computer in 1976.
first PC clone
The Compaq Portable is considered to be the first PC clone and was release in March 1983
by Compaq. The Compaq Portable was
100% compatible with IBM computers and was capable of running any software
developed for IBM computers.
first multimedia computer
In 1992, Tandy
Radio Shack becomes one of the first companies to release a computer based
on the MPC standard with its
introduction of the M2500 XL/2 and M4020 SX computers.
first
computer network
In 1969 ARPANET first came into existence when the first two nodes were established between UCLA and Stanford Research Institute (SRI) followed shortly thereafter by UCSB and the University of Utah.
ARPANET
= Short for Advanced Research Projects Agency Network, ARPANET
or ARPAnet began development in 1966
by the United States ARPA. ARPANET was a Wide Area Network linking many
Universities and research centers, was first to use packet switching, and was
the beginning of what we consider the Internet today.
ARPANET completed its
transition to TCP/IP on January 2, 1983, was later replaced by NSFNET in 1990,
and then decommissioned on February 28, 1990.
List of some of the major computers companies first computers.
Ø Compaq -
In March 1983, Compaq released its first computer and the first 100% IBM
compatible computer the "Compaq Portable."
Ø Dell -
In 1985, Dell introduced its first computer, the "Turbo PC."
Ø Hewlett
Packard - In 1966, Hewlett Packard released its first general
computer, the "HP-2115."
Ø NEC -
In 1958, NEC builds its first computer the "NEAC 1101."
Ø Toshiba -
In 1954, Toshiba introduces its first computer, the "TAC" digital
computer.
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