12

First Computer The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936. It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer
Page 2: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

First ComputerFirst Computer

The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.

It is the first electrical binary programmable computer.

Page 3: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

Stored Program Stored Program Computer.Computer.

An old British computer the EDSAC is considered to be the fist stored program computer.

This computer was first used on May 6, 1949.

It was also the first computer to run a graphical computer game.

Page 4: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

The Term “Debug”The Term “Debug”

First said by Admiral Grace Hopper.

The first one to use the term Bug was Thomas Edison in 1878.

Page 5: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

The Internet.The Internet.

The internet was a vision of the people in the 60’s.

They connected 2 computers from dial up phone lines in 1965.

First done by Leonard Kleinrock.

Page 6: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

Babbage’s Analytical Babbage’s Analytical Engine.Engine.

In its logical design the machine was essentially modern, anticipating the first completed general-purpose computers by about 100 years.

Babbage continued to refine the design until his death in 1861.

Page 7: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

ProgramProgram

A program is a sequence of instructions written to perform a specified task for a computer.

Page 8: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

Tabulation MachineTabulation Machine

An electrical device designed to assist in summarizing information and, later, accounting.

It was created by Herman Hollerith.

Page 9: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

ENIACENIAC

The first electronic computer.

Made to be reprogrammed to solve a full range of computing problems.

Created by the United States Army during World War two.

Page 10: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

Why the transistor Why the transistor helped.helped.

The transistor was the first device designed to act as both a transmitter, converting sound waves into electronic waves, and resistor, controlling electronic current.

Page 11: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

MicrocomputerMicrocomputer

Invented by Isaac Asimov.

The first model was sold as a kit and assembled by the user.

Came with as little as 256 bits of RAM and no input/output device.

Page 12: First Computer  The first computer was made by Konrad Zuse in hist parents living room in 1936.  It is the first electrical binary programmable computer

Sources.Sources.

http://www.wikipedia.org/, http://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch000984.htm, http://www.criminology.fsu.edu/book/chapter1.html.