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The Computer
Chronicles
The First Generation:
1946-1958 (The Vacuum Tube Years)
The first generation computers
were huge, slow, expensive, and often undependable. In 1946
two Americans, Presper Eckert, and John Mauchly
built the ENIAC electronic computer which used vacuum tubes instead of
the mechanical switches of the Mark I. The ENIAC used thousands of
vacuum tubes, which took up a lot of space and gave off a great deal of heat
just like light bulbs do. The ENIAC led to other vacuum tube type
computers like the EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Automatic
Computer) and the UNIVAC I (UNIVersal Automatic Computer).
The vacuum tube was an extremely important step in the advancement of computers. Vacuum tubes were invented the same time the light bulb was invented by Thomas Edison and worked very similar to light bulbs. It's purpose was to act like an amplifier and a switch. Without any moving parts, vacuum tubes could take very weak signals and make the signal stronger (amplify it). Vacuum tubes could also stop and start the flow of electricity instantly (switch). These two properties made the ENIAC computer possible.
The ENIAC gave off so much
heat that they had to be cooled by gigantic air conditioners.
However even with these huge coolers, vacuum tubes still overheated
regularly. It was time for something new.
The Second Generation:
1959-1964 (The Era of the Transistor)
The transistor computer
did not last as long as the vacuum tube computer lasted, but it was no less
important in the advancement of computer technology. In 1947 three
scientists, John Bardeen,
William Shockley, and Walter Brattain working at AT&T's
Bell Labs invented what would replace the vacuum tube forever. This
invention was the transistor which functions like a vacuum tube in that
it can be used to relay and switch electronic signals.
There were
obvious differences between the transisitor and the vacuum tube. The
transistor was faster, more reliable, smaller, and much cheaper to build than a
vacuum tube. One transistor replaced the equivalent of 40 vacuum
tubes. These transistors were made of solid material, some of which is
silicon, an abundant element (second only to oxygen) found in beach sand
and glass. Therefore they were very cheap to produce. Transistors
were found to conduct electricity faster and better than vacuum
tubes. They were also much smaller and gave off virtually no
heat compared to vacuum tubes. Their use marked a new beginning for
the computer. Without this invention, space travel in the 1960's would not
have been possible. However, a new invention would even further
advance our ability to use computers.
The Third Generation:
1965-1970 (Integrated Circuits - Miniaturizing the Computer)
Transistors were a tremendous breakthrough in advancing the computer.
However no one could predict that thousands even now millions of transistors
(circuits) could be compacted in such a small space. The integrated
circuit, or as it is sometimes referred to as semiconductor chip,
packs a huge number of transistors onto a single wafer of silicon.
Robert Noyce of Fairchild Corporation and Jack Kilby of
Texas Instruments independently discovered the amazing attributes of
integrated circuits. Placing such large numbers of transistors on a single
chip vastly increased the power of a single computer and lowered its cost
considerably.
Since the
invention of integrated circuits, the number of transistors that can be placed
on a single chip has doubled every two years, shrinking both the
size and cost of computers even further and further enhancing its power.
Most electronic devices today use some form of integrated circuits placed on
printed circuit boards-- thin pieces of bakelite or
fiberglass that have electrical connections etched onto them -- sometimes
called a mother board.
These third
generation computers could carry out instructions in billionths of a
second. The size of these machines dropped to the size of small file
cabinets. Yet, the single biggest advancement in the computer era was yet
to be discovered.
The Fourth Generation:
1971-Today (The Microprocessor)
This generation can be
characterized by both the jump to monolithic integrated
circuits
(millions of transistors put onto one integrated
circuit chip) and the invention of the microprocessor (a single
chip that could do all the processing of a full-scale computer).
By putting millions of transistors onto one single chip more calculation
and faster speeds could be reached by computers. Because electricity
travels about a foot in a billionth of a second, the smaller the distance the
greater the speed of computers.
However what really triggered the tremendous growth of computers and its significant impact on our lives is the invention of the microprocessor. Ted Hoff, employed by Intel (Robert Noyce's new company) invented a chip the size of a pencil eraser that could do all the computing and logic work of a computer. The microprocessor was made to be used in calculators, not computers. It led, however, to the invention of personal computers, or microcomputers.
It wasn't until the 1970's that
people began buying computer for personal use. One of the
earliest personal computers was the Altair 8800 computer
kit. In 1975 you could purchase this kit and put it together to
make your own personal computer. In 1977 the Apple
II was sold to the public and in 1981 IBM entered
the PC (personal computer) market.
Today we have all heard of Intel and its Pentium® Processors and now we know how it all got started. The computers of the next generation will have millions upon millions of transistors on one chip and will perform over a billion calculations in a single second. There is no end in sight for the computer movement.
Directions: Answer each of the questions after reading the article above. Write in complete sentences. You must think and be creative with your answers.
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