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Table of Contents




Introduction:

Modern computer is the result of constant development in computer structure. If we probe out the history of modern computer, it would become evident that modern computer went through different generations and a lot of hard work has been done by experts in order to provide a balanced product that can be used for general purpose, by general users. Basically, this evolution went through four different generations. In this paper, evolution of modern computer through all four generations has been discussed in detail.

First Generation:

When the WW2 began, governments started to develop computers for strategic purpose and computers like Z3 and Colossus were produced for decoding secret messages and computational purpose. However, Mark 1 is the worth mentioning product of that era. Developed by Howard H. Aiken with the cooperation of IBM, this was the first modern computer developed for US Navy and consisted on 500 miles length, used for calculation purpose. The drawback of this computer was its slow speed of calculation which had been overcome by ENIAC.

ENIAC:

The second worth mentioning computer is ENIAC, developed by University of Pennsylvania. It consisted of approximately 18 thousand vacuum tubes, 5 million joints and 70 thousand resistors. It was faster as compared to the Mark 1 but such massive product was hard to make energy efficient. Till 1955, it was used for weather anticipation, generating numbers and designing tunnels.

EDVAC:

EDVAC was the first computer, produced by John Von Neumann, which utilized memory and conditional programming. It had capacity to resume the instruction, execute data and perform arithmetic operation. It was also developed in 1945 and the major aspect of its success was the use of Central processing unit. However, UNIVAC1 was the first commercially used computer. Developed in 1951, and produced by Mauchly and Eckert, this computer was used for election of president in 1952.

Second Generation:

second generation computers consist of the era from 1956 to 1963 when great evolutions occurred like transistor replacement, programmable computers, energy efficient, faster, reliable and small sized systems etc. Supercomputers were the first invention of this period, produced by LARC and IBM. These systems were powerful but costly and used in atomic energy sector. However, till the beginning of 1960s, computer systems were being used in commercial sectors including universities, large corporations and governmental organizations. The benefit of using transmitter was that it allowed the users to connect secondary storage medium like disk, tape memory and similar other sources along with printers. Another remarkable development of this era is storing program using high level language and performing different functions such as printing customer invoice, perform paycheck calculations etc. languages used in this era were COBOL and FORTRAN. 

Third Generation:

From 1964, the era of third generation starts and spread to 1971 and integrated circuits is the conferment of this era. Jack Kilby is the founder of IC and introduced them keeping the issue of heat and damage caused by transistors under consideration.  Integrating circuits to small disc, referred to as semiconductor, computer became smaller as more equipments shrank to a single chip.  This semiconductor laid the foundation of microprocessor in year 1971. Another noteworthy product of this era is IBM system/360 which was a clear transition to electronic computers from punched-cards. The second invention of this era was development of operating system. Dennis Ritchie and Kenneth Thompson had been the founder of UNIX operating system which was developed in 1969 and tested on DEC minicomputer. UNIX was first modern OS used by universities and organizations for different purposes.

Fourth Generation:

Fourth generation computers were the evolution of IC to LSI, VLSI and ULSI which allowed manufacturers to compress large thousands and then millions equipments on a single chip, with the decrease in price, till 1980s. These microprocessors were used in not only computer systems but also in microwave ovens, automobiles and TVs as well. Till the mid of 1970s, Apple computers, Radio Shack and Commodore brought computer to general users, with user friendly software and simple applications. Till 1980s, video games like Pac Man and Atari 2600 augmented the interest of general consumer. Ultimately in 1981, IBM developed first personal computer which gained ample popularity that till 1982, approximately 5.5 million users became regular computer users. Within a decade, this ratio became 65 million and the size got smaller and smaller. Apple introduced Macintosh as the competitor to IBM PC, in 1984 which was ample user friendly due to its GUI and hence, smaller in size.  With the passage of time, the concept of networking was introduced which allowed a number of small computers to share information, memory, space and software sources. Such shared computing used electronic gateways like telephone line for global web surfing and wired network such as LAN, WAN and MAN.

Conclusion:

Today, we can see the results of this evolution in the form of laptops, table PCs, mobile phones (conferment of microprocessor) and LTE. However, it cannot be said that we have reached at the apex of this evolution because still many developments are underway.  



References

Campus.udayton.edu,. (2014). History of Modern Computers. Retrieved 18 November 2014, from http://campus.udayton.edu/~hume/Computers/comp3.htm





Appendix:

Year
Inventors 
Inventions
Description of Computer History Milestone or Invention
1936
Konrad Zuse 
Z1 
ENTER
First freely programmable computer.
1942
John Atanasoff & Clifford Berry
ABC 
ENTER
Who was first in the computing biz is not always as easy as ABC.
1944
Howard Aiken & Grace Hopper
Harvard Mark I 
ENTER
The Harvard Mark 1 computer.
1946
John Presper Eckert & John W. Mauchly 
ENIAC 1 
ENTER
20,000 vacuum tubes later.... 
1948
Frederic Williams & Tom Kilburn 
Manchester Baby & Williams Tube 
ENTER
Baby and the Williams Tube turn on the memory.
1947/48
John Bardeen, Walter Brattain & Wiliam Shockley 
 The Transistor 
ENTER
No, a transistor is not a computer, but this invention greatly affected the history of computers. 
1951
John Presper Eckert & John W. Mauchly 
UNIVAC 
ENTER
First commercial computer & able to pick presidential winners.
1953
International Business Machines 
IBM 701 EDPM 
ENTER
IBM enters into 
'The History Of Computers'.
1954
John Backus & IBM  
FORTRAN 
ENTER
The first successful high level programming language.
1958
Jack Kilby 
& Robert Noyce 
Integrated Circuit 
ENTER
Otherwise known as 'The Chip'
1962
Steve Russell 
& MIT 
Spacewar 
ENTER
The first computer game invented.
1964
Douglas Engelbart 
Computer Mouse 
& Windows 
ENTER
Nicknamed the mouse because the tail came out the end.
1969
ARPAnet 
ENTER
The original  
Internet.
1970
Intel 1103 
ENTER
The world's first available dynamic RAM chip.
1971
Faggin, Hoff & Mazor 
Intel 4004 
ENTER
The first microprocessor.
1971
Alan Shugart 
&IBM 
The "Floppy" Disk 
ENTER
Nicknamed the "Floppy" for its' flexibility.
1973
Robert Metcalfe & Xerox 
The Ethernet 
ENTER
Networking.
1974/75
Scelbi  & Mark-8 Altair & IBM 5100 
ENTER
The first consumer computers.
1976/77
Apple I, II & TRS-80 &Commodore Pet 
ENTER
More first consumer computers.
1978
Dan Bricklin & Bob Frankston 
VisiCalc Spreadsheet 
ENTER
Any product that pays for itself in two weeks is a surefire winner.
1979
Seymour Rubenstein & Rob Barnaby 
WordStar 
ENTER
Word Processors.
1981
IBM 
The IBM PC 
ENTER
From an "Acorn" 
grows a personal computer revolution
1981
Microsoft 
MS-DOS 
ENTER
From "Quick And Dirty" comes the operating system of the century.
1983
Apple Lisa 
ENTER
The first home computer with a GUI, graphical user interface.
1984
Apple MacIntosh 
ENTER
The more affordable home computer with a GUI.
1985
Microsoft Windows 
ENTER
Microsoft begins the friendly war with Apple.
SERIES
TO BE
CONTINUED


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