A History of Information Technology and Systems
- Writing and Alphabets--communication.
- First humans communicated only through speaking and picture drawings.
- 3000 B.C., the Sumerians in Mesopotamia (what is today southern Iraq) devised cuniform
- Around 2000 B.C., Phoenicians created symbols
- The Greeks later adopted the Phoenician alphabet and added vowels; the Romans gave the letters Latin names to create the alphabet we use today.
- Paper and Pens--input technologies.
- Sumerians' input technology was a stylus that could scratch marks in wet clay.
- About 2600 B.C., the Egyptians write on the papyrus plant
- around 100 A.D., the Chinese made paper from rags, on which modern-day papermaking is based.
- Books and Libraries: Permanent Storage Devices.
- Religious leaders in Mesopotamia kept the earliest "books"
- The Egyptians kept scrolls
- Around 600 B.C., the Greeks began to fold sheets of papyrus vertically into leaves and bind them together.
- The First Numbering Systems.
- Egyptian system:
- The numbers 1-9 as vertical lines, the number 10 as a U or circle, the number 100 as a coiled rope, and the number 1,000 as a lotus blossom.
- The first numbering systems similar to those in use today were invented between 100 and 200 A.D. by Hindus in India who created a nine-digit numbering system.
- Around 875 A.D., the concept of zero was developed.
- The First Calculators: The Abacus.
One of the very first information processors.
- The First Information Explosion.
- Johann Gutenberg (Mainz, Germany)
- The development of book indexes and the widespread use of page numbers.
- The first general purpose "computers"
- Slide Rules, the Pascaline and Leibniz's Machine.
- Babbage's Engines
Charles Babbage (1792-1871), eccentric English mathematician
- The Beginnings of Telecommunication.
- Voltaic Battery.
- Telegraph.
- Morse Code.
- Telephone and Radio.
- Followed by the discovery that electrical waves travel through space and can produce an effect far from the point at which they originated.
- These two events led to the invention of the radio
- Electromechanical Computing
- Herman Hollerith and IBM.
Herman Hollerith (1860-1929) in 1880.

Census Machine.

Early punch cards.


Punch card workers.
- Mark 1.
Paper tape stored data and program instructions.

- First Tries.
- Eckert and Mauchly.
- The First High-Speed, General-Purpose Computer Using Vacuum Tubes:
Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC)
The ENIAC team (Feb 14, 1946). Left to right: J. Presper Eckert, Jr.; John Grist Brainerd; Sam Feltman; Herman H. Goldstine; John W. Mauchly; Harold Pender; Major General G. L. Barnes; Colonel Paul N. Gillon.


Rear view (note vacuum tubes).
- The First Stored-Program Computer(s)
The Manchester University Mark I (prototype).
- The First General-Purpose Computer for Commercial Use: Universal Automatic Computer (UNIVAC).
UNIVAC publicity photo.
- The Four Generations of Digital Computing.
- The First Generation (1951-1958).
- Vacuum tubes as their main logic elements.
- Punch cards to input and externally store data.
- Rotating magnetic drums for internal storage of data and programs
- Programs written in
- Machine language
- Assembly language
- The Second Generation (1959-1963).
- Vacuum tubes replaced by transistors as main logic element.
- AT&T's Bell Laboratories, in the 1940s
- Crystalline mineral materials called semiconductors could be used in the design of a device called a transistor
- Magnetic tape and disks began to replace punched cards as external storage devices.
- Magnetic cores (very small donut-shaped magnets that could be polarized in one of two directions to represent data) strung on wire within the computer became the primary internal storage technology.
- High-level programming languages
- The Third Generation (1964-1979).

- Individual transistors were replaced by integrated circuits.
- Magnetic tape and disks completely replace punch cards as external storage devices.
- Magnetic core internal memories began to give way to a new form, metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) memory, which, like integrated circuits, used silicon-backed chips.
- Operating systems
- Advanced programming languages like BASIC developed.
- Which is where Bill Gates and Microsoft got their start in 1975.
- The Fourth Generation (1979- Present).
- Large-scale and very large-scale integrated circuits (LSIs and VLSICs)
- Microprocessors that contained memory, logic, and control circuits (an entire CPU = Central Processing Unit) on a single chip.
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