Question
When was the first
computer invented?
Answer
There is no easy answer
to this question because of all the different classifications of computers. Therefore, this document has been created with a listing of
each of the first computers starting with the first automatic computing engines
leading up to the computers of today. Keep in mind that early inventions such
as the abacus , calculators, and tablet machines are not accounted for in this document.
The word
"computer" was first used
The
word "computer" was first recorded as being used in 1613 and was originally was
used to describe a person who performed calculations or computations. The
definition of a computer remained the same until the end of the 19th century
when it began referring to a machine that performed calculations.
First mechanical computer
or automatic computing engine concept
In 1822, Charles Babbage purposed and began
developing the Difference Engine, considered to be the first automatic computing engine that was
capable of computing several sets of numbers and making a hard copies of the
results. Unfortunately, because of funding he was never able to complete a
full-scale functional version of this machine. In June of 1991, the London Science Museum completed the Difference Engine No 2
for the bicentennial year of Babbage's birth and later completed the printing
mechanism in 2000.
First programmable
computer
The Z1, originally created by Germany's Konrad Zuse in his parent’s living
room in 1936 to 1938 and is considered
to be the first electro-mechanical binary programmable (modern) computer and
really the first functional computer.
The first electric
programmable computer
The Colossus was the first electric
programmable computer and was developed by Tommy Flowers and first demonstrated
in December 1943. The Colossus was created to help the British code breakers
read encrypted German messages.
The first digital
computer
Short
for Atanasoff-Berry Computer, the ABC started being developed
by Professor John Vincent Atanasoff and graduate student
Cliff Berry in 1937 and continued to be
developed until 1942 at the Iowa State College (now Iowa State University). The
ABC was an electrical computer that used vacuum tubes for digital computation
including binary math and Boolean logic and had no CPU. On October 19, 1973, the US Federal Judge Earl R. Larson signed his decision that
the ENIAC patent by Eckert and mushily was invalid and named Atanasoff the
inventor of the electronic digital computer.
The first stored program computer
The
early British computer known as the EDSAC is considered to be the
first stored program electronic computer. The computer performed its first
calculation on May 6, 1949 and was the computer that
ran the first graphical computer game, nicknamed "Baby".
The first computer
company
The
first computer company was the Electronic Controls Company and was founded in 1949 by J. Presper Eckert and
John Mushily, the same individuals who helped create the ENIAC computer. The
company was later renamed to EMCC or Eckert-Mushily Computer Corporation and
released a series of mainframe computers under the UNIVAC name.
First stored program
computer
First
delivered to the United States Government in 1950, the UNIVAC 1101 or ERA 1101 is considered to be the
first computer that was capable of storing and running a program from memory.
First commercial computer
In
1942, Konrad Zuse begin working on the Z4, which later became the first commercial computer after being
sold to Eduard Stiefel a mathematician of the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology Zurich on July 12, 1950.
The first PC (IBM
compatible) computer
On
April 7, 1953 IBM publicly introduced the 701, its first electric computer and first mass produced computer.
Later IBM introduced its first personal computer called the IBM PC in 1981. The computer was
code named and still sometimes referred to as the Acorn and had a 8088 processor, 16 KB of
memory, which was expandable to 256 and utilizing MS-DOS.
The first computer with
RAM
MIT
introduces the Whirlwind machine on March 8, 1955, a revolutionary computer that was the first digital computer
with magnetic core RAM and real-time graphics.
The
TX-O (Transistorized Experimental computer) is the first transistorized
computer to be demonstrated at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in 1956.
The first minicomputer
The first mass-market PC
The first workstation
Although
it was never sold, the first workstation is considered to be the Xerox Alto, introduced in 1974. The computer was revolutionary for its
time and included a fully functional computer, display, and mouse. The computer operated like many computers today utilizing windows, menus and icons as an interface to its
operating system.
The first microprocessor
The first personal
computer
In
1975, Ed Roberts coined the term "personal
computer" when he introduced the Altair 8800. Although the first personal computer is considered by many to
be the Kenback-1, which was first
introduced for $750 in 1971. The computer relied on a series of switches for
inputting data and output data by turning on and off a series of lights.
The Micral is considered the be the
first commercial non-assembly computer. The computer used the Intel 8008
processor and sold for $1,750 in 1973.
The first laptop or
portable computer
The
first truly portable computer or laptop is considered to be the Osborne I, which was released on April 1981 and developed by Adam Osborne. The Osborne I weighed 24.5 pounds, had a 5-inch display, 64 KB
of memory, two 5 1/4" floppy drives, ran the CP/M 2.2 operating system,
included a modem, and cost US$179.
The IBM PC Division (PCD) later
released the IBM portable in1984, it's first portable computer that weighed in at 30 pounds.
Later in 1986, IBM PCD announced it's first laptop computer, the PC
Convertible, weighing 12 pounds. Finally, in 1994, IBM introduced the IBM
ThinkPad 775CD, the first notebook with an integrated CD-ROM.
The first Apple computer
The first PC clone
The Compaq Portable is considered to be the
first PC clone and was release in March
1983 by Compaq. The Compaq Portable was 100% compatible with IBM computers and
was capable of running any software developed for IBM computers.
The first multimedia
computer
In
1992, Tandy Radio Shack becomes one
of the first companies to release a computer based on the MPC standard with its introduction of
the M2500 XL/2 and M4020 SX computers.
Below
is a listing of some of the major computers companies first computers.
Compaq - In March 1983, Compaq released its first
computer and the first 100% IBM compatible computer the "Compaq
Portable."
Dell - In 1985, Dell introduced its first computer, the "Turbo PC."
Hewlett Packard - In 1966, Hewlett Packard released its first general computer, the "HP-2115."
NEC - In 1958, NEC builds its first computer the "NEAC 1101."
Toshiba - In 1954, Toshiba introduces its first computer, the "TAC" digital computer.
Dell - In 1985, Dell introduced its first computer, the "Turbo PC."
Hewlett Packard - In 1966, Hewlett Packard released its first general computer, the "HP-2115."
NEC - In 1958, NEC builds its first computer the "NEAC 1101."
Toshiba - In 1954, Toshiba introduces its first computer, the "TAC" digital computer.
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