Author Topic: father of the computer  (Read 1301 times)

Offline pugsly

  • Parolee
  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 101
father of the computer
« Reply #30 on: September 23, 2003, 01:39:49 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by SunKing
and this pretains to AH in what way?


Gee I dont know Could it be you play AH on a COMPUTER?

Offline muckmaw

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3874
father of the computer
« Reply #31 on: September 23, 2003, 01:46:45 PM »
Who invented Video games?

Offline Gadfly

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1364
father of the computer
« Reply #32 on: September 23, 2003, 01:58:08 PM »
heheh xerox invented everything

Twice!

Offline ccvi

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2074
      • http://www.carl-eike-hofmeister.de/
father of the computer
« Reply #33 on: September 23, 2003, 03:50:20 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by pugsly
Professor John Atanasoff and graduate student Clifford Berry built the world's first electronic-digital computer at Iowa State University between 1939 and 1942.


Quote
Originally posted by lucull
The Z1 is today considered to be the first freely programmable computer of the world. It was completed in 1938 and financed completely from private funds. Konrad Zuse's first computer, built between 1936 and 1938, was destroyed in the bombardment of Berlin in WW II, together with all construction plans. In 1986, Konrad Zuse decided to reconstruct the Z1.[/URL]


I guess Zuse wins by a few years. Any other inventors? ;)

Offline midnight Target

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 15114
father of the computer
« Reply #34 on: September 23, 2003, 03:53:37 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by udet
His name was Charles Babbage and he lived in the 1600s :p


Yep

But about 100 years later..

http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Babbage.html
« Last Edit: September 23, 2003, 03:56:05 PM by midnight Target »

Offline midnight Target

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 15114
father of the computer
« Reply #35 on: September 23, 2003, 03:58:48 PM »
Quote
By 1834 Babbage had completed the first drawings of the analytical engine, the forerunner of the modern electronic computer. His work on the difference engine had led him to a much more sophisticated idea. Although the analytic engine never progressed beyond detailed drawings, it is remarkably similar in logical components to a present day computer. Babbage describes five logical components, the store, the mill, the control, the input and the output.

Offline vorticon

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 7935
father of the computer
« Reply #36 on: September 23, 2003, 04:01:38 PM »
i know that...i was just making a bloody point that the computer as most people know it (pc) was first produced by apple

Offline pugsly

  • Parolee
  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 101
father of the computer
« Reply #37 on: September 23, 2003, 06:43:41 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by ccvi
I guess Zuse wins by a few years. Any other inventors? ;)


Where is it then?
you can see the ABC computer at Iowa state!
If you read the articles to will that John Vincent atanasoff invented the binary system!
Wich all modern computers are based apon.
You will also find that he was the first to use electronic switches.
And memory discharging.

Offline pugsly

  • Parolee
  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 101
father of the computer
« Reply #38 on: September 23, 2003, 06:58:42 PM »
Today, we look for the first modern digital computer. The University of Houston's College of Engineering presents this series about the machines that make our civilization run, and the people whose ingenuity created them.

The Sperry-Rand Corporation sued Honeywell in 1967. Honeywell was making digital computers, and Sperry claimed Honeywell owed them a royalty. After WW-II, Sperry had bought the patent rights to ENIAC, the first digital electronic computer. Honeywell came back at Sperry with a countersuit. They made the extraordinary claim that Sperry's patent was invalid -- that the digital computer had already been invented before ENIAC.

Honeywell won its case six years later, and Allan Mackintosh tells us that they did it by correcting history. They found their way back to the winter of 1937. A young physics instructor at Iowa State named John Atanasoff was struggling with the problem of mechanizing computation. Things were going badly this particular evening. Finally, in frustration, he jumped into his car and sped off into the night. Two hundred miles later, he pulled up at a roadhouse in Illinois for something to drink.

And there it came to him. A machine could easily manipulate simple on-off electrical pulses. If computations were done in the "either-or" number base of 2 -- instead of base 10 -- a machine could do calculations naturally. Sitting in that road house, 200 miles from home, he made the crucial step in inventing the digital computer.

Two years later Atanasoff and a colleague named Berry started to build a computer. But in 1942 they were drafted, and the almost-complete computer was set aside without being patented. Meanwhile, the government started work on the ENIAC digital computer. ENIAC differed in some ways, and it was bigger.

Besides, an unfinished, unpatented machine doesn't make a very strong claim in a priority dispute. But there's a catch here. One of the major inventors of ENIAC -- John Mauchly -- had known Atanasoff. They'd corresponded. Mauchly had even visited Atanasoff in Iowa for a week in 1941. In the end, it was clear that the ideas that made ENIAC had come from Atanasoff.

Atanasoff did all his work with only $6000 of grant money. But the military funded the ENIAC project. They wanted to make artillery firing tables, and they put a half-million dollars into ENIAC -- a huge sum in 1942.

So the next time you use your pocket calculator -- the next time you spend 30 seconds doing what would have taken all afternoon -- think about a man clearing his mind one winter night in 1937. Think about a man gazing at a yellow line for five hours, until he was suddenly able to see through the dark.

I'm John Lienhard, at the University of Houston, where we're interested in the way inventive minds work.

Offline JB73

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 8780
father of the computer
« Reply #39 on: September 23, 2003, 07:05:37 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Manedew
heheh xerox invented everything :)
thats the company i work for. they are soooooo dmn stoopid. they couldnt find a use for the "mouse" so they let apple use it for free.
I don't know what to put here yet.

Offline Gh0stFT

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1736
father of the computer
« Reply #40 on: September 24, 2003, 12:14:07 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by pugsly
Where is it then?


you can see the rebuild Z1 in the "Deutschen Technik Museum" at Berlin.

Ghosty
The statement below is true.
The statement above is false.

Offline pugsly

  • Parolee
  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 101
father of the computer
« Reply #41 on: September 24, 2003, 12:38:27 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Gh0stFT
you can see the rebuild Z1 in the "Deutschen Technik Museum" at Berlin.

Ghosty

It does not do the same thig therefore it does not meet the definition Of being the FIRST digital computer using the binary system.

Offline Gh0stFT

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1736
father of the computer
« Reply #42 on: September 24, 2003, 12:59:22 AM »
Many encyclopedias and other reference works state that the first large-scale automatic digital computer was the Harvard Mark 1, which was developed by Howard H. Aiken (and team) in America between 1939 and 1944. However, in the aftermath of World War II it was discovered that a program controlled computer called the Z3 had been completed in Germany in 1941, which means that the Z3 pre-dated the Harvard Mark I.

Although based on relays, the Z3 was very sophisticated for its time; for example, it utilized the binary number system and could perform floating-point arithmetic.

Today, the Z3 is widely acknowledged as being the first fully functional automatic digital computer, and Konrad Zuse is acclaimed by computer scientists as being the most admired and respected computer pioneer.

but  who cares  anyway ;)

Regards
Ghosty
The statement below is true.
The statement above is false.

Offline Thrawn

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6972
father of the computer
« Reply #43 on: September 24, 2003, 01:12:18 AM »
Good stuff pugsy.

It's also good to see you modify you thesis with the introduction of new information, and critique.


"Who was the FIRST inventor of the computer?"

"it does not meet the definition Of being the FIRST digital computer using the binary system."


Offline pugsly

  • Parolee
  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 101
father of the computer
« Reply #44 on: September 24, 2003, 05:13:06 PM »
some people just cant read :D