Transcript Slide 1
Technology in Action © 2007 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1 Technology in Action Technology in Focus: History of the PC 2 Intel 8080 and the Altair 8800 • • • • • The first microcomputer Sold as a kit Switches for input Lights for output Gates and Allen create a compiler for Basic • MITS receives 4,000 orders 3 Apple I and Apple II • Apple I built by Steve Wozniak in 1976 • Apple II developed by Steve Jobs in 1977 • Uses Motorola processor • First fully contained microcomputer • Highly successful 4 Early Competitors • Commodore • TRS-80 • Osborne 5 IBM PC • IBM enters small computer market 1981 • Uses open architecture • Purchases operating system from Microsoft 6 Beginners All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code (BASIC) • Revolutionized the software industry • Programming language that beginners could easily learn • Key language of the PC • Bill Gates and Paul Allen used BASIC to write the program for the Altair • Led to the creation of Microsoft 7 Advent of Operating Systems • Steve Wozniak invents floppy drive • Disk Operating System (DOS): Operating system that controlled the first Apples • Control Program for Microcomputers (CP/M): First operating system for Intel-based PCs • MS-DOS – Operating system for IBM PCs – Based on an operating system called Quick and Dirty Operating System (QDOS) – Created by Bill Gates and Paul Allen – All PCs using the Intel chip used MS-DOS 8 Software Application Explosion • Electronic Spreadsheets – VisiCalc – Lotus 1-2-3 and Microsoft Excel • Word Processing Bricklin and Frankston – WordStar – Word for MS-DOS – Word Perfect VisiCalc screenshot 9 Graphical User Interface • Xerox Xerox Alto – Palo Alto Research Center – Alto: 1972 • Apple – Lisa: 1983 – Macintosh: 1984 10 The Internet Boom • • • • Mosaic Netscape Internet Explorer Windows 95 11 Early Computer History • Pascalene 1624 – The first accurate mechanical calculator – Created by Blaise Pascal – Used to add, subtract, multiply, and divide • Jacquard Loom 1820 – Created by Joseph Jacquard – A machine that automated the weaving of complex patterns – Used holes punched in cards to automate the process 12 Early Computer History • Analytical Engine 1834 – Created by Charles Babbage • The father of computing – The first automatic calculator – Includes components similar to those found in today's computers • Hollerith Tabulating Machine 1890 – Created by Herman Hollerith – Used punch cards to tabulate census data – Hollerith started the Tabulating Machine Company, which later became IBM 13 Early Computer History • Z1 1936 – Created by Konrad Zuse – The Z1 is a mechanical calculator – It included a control unit and memory functions • Atanasoff-Berry Computer 1939 – Created by John Atanasoff and Clifford Berry – The first electrically powered digital computer – Used vacuum tubes to store data – The first computer to use the binary system Atansoff-Berry Computer 14 Early Computer History • Harvard Mark I 1944 – Created by Howard Aiken and Grace Hopper – A computer used by the US Navy for ballistics calculations – Hopper’s contribution to computing was • Invention of the compiler • Coined the term “computer bug” • Turing Machine 1939 – Created by Alan Turing – A hypothetical model that defined a mechanical procedure or algorithm – Concept of an infinite tape that could read, write, and erase was precursor to today’s RAM 1st use of “computer bug” 15 Early Computer History • ENIAC 1944 – Created by John W. Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert – The first successful highspeed electronic digital computer ENIAC • UNIVAC 1951 – The first commercially successful electronic digital computer – Used magnetic tape UNIVAC 16 Early Computer History • Transistors 1945 – Invented at Bell Laboratories – Replaces vacuum tubes • Integrated circuits 1958 – Invented by Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments – A small chip containing thousands of transistors – Enabled computers to become smaller and lighter 17 Early Computer History • Microprocessor chip 1971 – Created by Intel Corporation – A small chip containing millions of transistors – It functions as the central processing unit (CPU) 18 Computer Generations • First-generation computers (1946–1958) – UNIVAC – Use vacuum tubes to store data • Second-generation computers (1959–1964) – Use transistors to store data • Third-generation computers (1965–1970) – Use integrated circuits • Fourth-generation computers (1971–Today) – Use a microprocessor chip 19