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History of Computer Science
Mechanical Inventions Before 1900s
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Antikythera 80 B.C.E. navigational aid
predicted motion of stars and planets
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Other Early Inventions
Abacus Astrolabe (one below dated 1212 A.D.)
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John Napier 1614 Napier “bones” calculate logarithms
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Blaise Pascal Mechanical adding machine ( ), the “pascaline”
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“First” Calculating Machine
Originally credited Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1671) , , Wilhelm Schickard invented one in 1623 to calculate ephemerides
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Joseph-Marie Jacquard
Jacquard loom used punched cards for patterns in weaving silk (1801)
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First Computer Graphics?
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Charles Babbage Difference engine: calculate trigonometric and logarithmic tables ( ), completed 1991 Analytical engine: precursor to modern computer (~1834, never built) Broke Vigenère cipher
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Ada Lovelace Interested in Babbage’s Analytical engine
First “programmer” algorithm program
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William Stanley Jevons
1869 “Logic Piano” solved Boolean logic problems (syllogisms) faster than could be done by hand ~ 3 feet tall keys (logical operations) + levers + letters press keys and appropriate letters appear showing the result
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Herman Hollerith Punched cards for US 1890 census data (saved $5 Mil and several years of processing time) Tabulating Machine Company IBM
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Ideas Advance in Mathematics
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Russell & Whitehead Write Principia Mathematica, which attempted to construct the foundations of mathematics on a rigorous logical basis. Bertrand Alfred North Russell Whitehead
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Leonardo Torres y Quevedo
: Built some electro-mechanical calculating devices, including one that played simple chess endgames against a human.
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David Hilbert 1928 (1) Is mathematics complete?
Can every mathematical statement be either proved or disproved? (2) Is mathematics consistent? Is it true that statements such as "0 = 1" cannot be proved by valid methods? (3) Is mathematics decidable? Is there a mechanical method that can be applied to any mathematical assertion and (at least in principle) eventually tell whether that assertion is true or not?
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Kurt Gödel Answered Hilbert’s first two questions in 1931
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Alan Turing 1936 Answered Hilbert’s last question (as did Alonzo Church) and proved the Halting Problem 1936 Turing Machine Breaking Enigma “bombes” (secret until 1970) 1950 Turing test for AI
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1941 Konrad Zuse Developed the “Z3”
first operational, general-purpose, program-controlled calculator
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1944 Howard Aiken 1943: Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (renamed Harvard Mark I) for simple arithmetic. Used by US Navy for ballistics and gunnery calculations
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1946 ENIAC vs Pentium 150MHz 16Mb RAM IBM ThinkPad 755 CX:
150x106 +/second stores 16x106 digits 11.7”x8.3”, 6.1 lbs 5000 +/second stores 200 digits 10ft tall, 1800 ft.2, 30 tons [ENIAC considered first electronic digital computer (Mauchly & Eckert) until info. on Colossus released in 1970]
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1944 EDVAC stored-program electronic computer
Mauchly, Eckert, and John von Neumann Maurice Wilkes builds EDSAC in 1948 (based on EDVAC), first stored-program digital computer
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Grace Hopper Worked with: Credited with: 1944: Aiken on Harvard Mark I
1949: Eckert and Mauchly on UNIVAC Credited with: 1951: first “computer” bug 1952: first compiler 1959: COBOL
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Hardware Revolutions 1947: Transistor invented by John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley who were awarded the 1956 Nobel Prize in physics. 1949: Jay Forrester invents magnetic core memory 1959: Jack Kilby (Texas Instruments) and Robert Noyce (Fairchild Semiconductor) invent the integrated circuit
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1950s Idea Revolutions 1956: Edsger Dijkstra develops algorithms for minimum spanning trees and shortest path in a graph 1957: FORTRAN by John Backus et. al. 1958: LISP by John McCarthy, Algol by Alan Perlis, John Backus, Peter Naur, et. al.
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1960s More programming languages Fred Brooks: operating systems
Chomsky and Rabin: automata theory Hoare: program correctness + quicksort 1968: computer mouse by Engelbart : Hoff and Faggin (Intel) design first microprocessor. Knuth’s 3-volume “The Art of Computer Programming” ARPAnet: precursor to Internet
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1970s Major advances in database theory (Codd)
UNIX (Thompson & Ritchie), C (Kernighan and Ritchie) RISC architecture Cray supercomputers Advances in algorithms and computational complexity (Karp, Cook) Public-key cryptosystems (RSA) Start of Usenet
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1980s Rise of personal computers (Jobs and Wozniak, founders of Apple)
1981: first computer viruses first successful marketable PC 1984: Apple Macintosh 1987: the US National Science Foundation starts NSFnet, precursor to part of today's Internet.
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1990s Parallel computing Biological computing e.g. Human Genome Project Quantum computing Growth of Internet and WWW Size/cost decrease and power increase of hardware Nano-technology
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