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computer : history and development
In 1889, an American inventor, Herman Hollerith (1860-1929), also applied the Jacquard loom concept to computing. His first task was to find a faster way to compute the U.S. census. The previous census in 1880 had taken nearly seven years to count and with an expanding population, the bureau feared it would take 10 years to count the latest census. Unlike Babbage's idea of using perforated cards to instruct the machine, Hollerith's method used cards to store data information which he fed into a machine that compiled the results mechanically. Each punch on a card represented one number, and combinations of two punches represented one letter. As many as 80 variables could be stored on a single card. Instead of ten years, census takers compiled their results in just six weeks with Hollerith's machine. In addition to their speed, the punch cards served as a storage method for data and they helped reduce computational errors. Hollerith brought his punch card reader into the business world, founding Tabulating Machine Company in 1896, later to become International Business Machines (IBM) in 1924 after a series of mergers. Other companies such as Remington Rand and Burroghs also manufactured punch readers for business use. Both business and government used punch cards for data processing until the 1960's.
In the ensuing years, several engineers made
other significant advances. Vannevar Bush (1890-1974) developed a calculator for
solving differential equations in 1931. The machine could solve complex differential
equations that had long left scientists and mathematicians baffled. The machine
was cumbersome because hundreds of gears and shafts were required to represent
numbers and their various relationships to each other. To eliminate this bulkiness,
John V. Atanasoff (b. 1903), a professor at Iowa State College (now called Iowa
State University) and his graduate student, Clifford Berry, envisioned an all-electronic
computer that applied Boolean algebra to computer circuitry. This approach was
based on the mid-19th century work of George Boole (1815-1864) who clarified the
binary system of algebra, which stated that any mathematical equations could be
stated simply as either true or false. By extending this concept to electronic
circuits in the form of on or off, Atanasoff and Berry had developed the first
all-electronic computer by 1940. Their project, however, lost its funding and
their work was overshadowed by similar developments by other scientists.
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