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CS 185C: The History of Computing September 26 Class Meeting Department of Computer Science San Jose State University Fall 2011 Instructor: Ron Mak www.cs.sjsu.edu/~mak
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 2 IEEE Global History Network Create your topic! Create in the appropriate category and subcategory Send me the URL by this Friday, Sept. 30 Initial contents (not all needs to be done by Friday) Object of your historical research Architecture (hardware or software), computer system, application, methodology, biography, company, etc. What do you want to discover from your research What questions do you want answered Outline of your research plan Proposed source materials museum artifacts, interviews, email exchanges with project advisors, etc. Rough timeline Online experts Ask specific questions Get suggestions and comments _
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 3 IEEE Global History Network Include the following text “I’m a student in the History of Computing class at San Jose State University ( http://www.cs.sjsu.edu/~mak/CS185C/ ). This is a work in progress that will turn into a final article by the end of the semester. I welcome your comments and advice!”http://www.cs.sjsu.edu/~mak/CS185C/ Otherwise other IEEE members may try to edit your article. Post frequent updates to your article. Drafts of your report Blog of your research activities The blog can end up as an appendix to your final report. _
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 4 Computer History Museum Archives When doing your research, be sure to take advantage of the archives of the Computer History Museum: http://www.computerhistory.org/explore/ http://www.computerhistory.org/explore/
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 5 Wednesday, September 28: Randall Neff “Yes, the HP-35 Fits in Your Pocket” Auditorium ENGR 189 at 6:00-7:00 PM Reception ENGR 294 at 5:00 PM The early history of HP calculators Hewlett Packard during the 70s was like Apple today. Really cool consumer products Every geek with any self respect wanted an HP calculator. Don’t forget to write and send me your essays after each guest lecture. Recordings online: http://www.sjsu.edu/atn/services/webcasting/archives/fall_2011 /hist/computing.html http://www.sjsu.edu/atn/services/webcasting/archives/fall_2011 /hist/computing.html
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 6 Greek Antikythera Mechanism Possibly the world’s first mechanical computer Created between 150-100 BCE Discovered 1901 in a shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera Calculated astronomical positions Sun and moon Inner planets Predicted solar eclipses
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 7 Greek Antikythera Mechanism X-ray imageReconstruction
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 8 Greek Antikythera Mechanism Videos: Animation: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/video/2009/jul/29/ antikythera-computer-animation http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/video/2009/jul/29/ antikythera-computer-animation Working model: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4eUibFQKJqI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4eUibFQKJqI
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 9 Abacus Japanese abacus (soroban) Each bead in the top (heaven) row is worth 5 Each bead in the bottom (earth) rows is worth 1 Each column was worth 0 through 9
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 10 Abacus Chinese abacus (suanpan) The Chinese abacus was hexadecimal! Each column was worth 0 through 15 For normal (decimal) computations, only one heaven bead and four earth beads were used in each column, worth 0 through 9.
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 11 Abacus Video: How to use the abacus: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvsnftXXKd w&NR=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvsnftXXKd w&NR=1
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 12 Slide Rule Mechanical analog computer using logarithms Invented around 1620-1630 William Oughtred (1575-1660) created the precursor to the modern side rule in 1632. In general use until modern electronic calculators Many scales Mostly multiply and divide using the C and D scales Doesn’t tell you where the decimal point is in the result.
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 13 Slide Rule Circular slide rule
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 14 Slide Rule Video: How to use a slide rule: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qz9k0rNTaIA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qz9k0rNTaIA
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 15 Curta Hand-held cranked mechanical calculator First introduced in 1948 Invented by Curt Herzstark (1902-1988) Add, subtract, multiply, divide Type I 8 digits input, 11 digits output Type II (introduced 1954) 11 digits, 15 digits output Doesn’t tell you where the decimal point is in the result.
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SJSU Dept. of Computer Science Fall 2011: September 26 CS 185C: This History of Computing © R. Mak 16 Curta Video: How to use a Curta: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYsOi6L_Pw4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYsOi6L_Pw4
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