Cards (17)

    • First generation computers
      Computing has its origins in mechanical devices designed to help solve arithmetical problems, dating back hundreds or even thousands of years
    • Examples of early mechanical devices
      • Greek Antikythera clockwork mechanism
      • Abacus
    • Programmable computers
      Computers that can have their instructions changed to produce different results
    • Programmable computers
      • Instructions can be stored and recalled, rather than wired in
      • Represent numbers using on/off electronic switches (binary)
    • Early programmable electronic computers
      • Colossus (used for code-breaking in WWII)
      • ENIAC (first general-purpose computer)
    • Early programmable electronic computers
      • Used bulky, expensive vacuum valves as electronic switches
      • Large, heavy, and unreliable compared to modern computers
    • ENIAC weighed 27 tons and occupied 63 square metres
    • Power consumption
      • Affects environmental impact and running costs
      • Heat generated by computers is an important consideration
    • Colossus used 8 kW, ENIAC used 170 kW
    • Power consumption of some home devices
      • Electric fire (2 kW)
      • Electric iron (1 kW)
      • 46-inch TV (120 W)
      • Desktop computer (300 W)
      • Energy-saving light bulb (10 W)
      • Electric kettle (2 kW)
    • To compare power consumption, figures in kilowatts need to be converted to watts by multiplying by 1000
    • Heating devices
      Generally use a lot of power
    • Heat from computers was used to dry clothes at Bletchley Park
    • Thomas Watson, Chairman of IBM, 1943: '"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers"'
    • Popular Mechanics, March 1949: '"Where a calculator on the ENIAC is equipped with 18,000 vacuum tubes and weighs 30 tons, computers in the future may have only 1,000 vacuum tubes and perhaps weigh 1.5 tons."'
    • Throughout much of the first generation, computers were seen as mysterious entities
    • Alan Turing proposed the Turing test in 1950 to determine if a computer can think like a human
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