Timeline computers 1959.stretch

CP1 - Computer History Timeline

  • The Z3 Computer

    The Z3 Computer
    The Z3, an early computer built by German engineer Konrad Zuse, used 2,300 relays, performs floating point binary arithmetic, and has a 22-bit word length. The Z3 was used for aerodynamic calculations but was destroyed in a bombing raid on Berlin in late 1943. Zuse later supervised a reconstruction of the Z3 in the 1960s, which is currently on display at the Deutsches Museum in Munich.
  • ENIGMA

    ENIGMA
    Built as an electro-mechanical means of decrypting Nazi ENIGMA-based military communications during World War II, the British Bombe is conceived of by computer pioneer Alan Turing and Harold Keen of the British Tabulating Machine Company. Hundreds of allied bombes were built in order to determine the daily rotor start positions of Enigma cipher machines, which in turn allowed the Allies to decrypt German messages.
  • Harvard Mark 1

    Harvard Mark 1
    Conceived by Harvard physics professor Howard Aiken, and designed and built by IBM, the Harvard Mark 1 is a room-sized, relay-based calculator. The machine had a fifty-foot long camshaft running the length of machine that synchronized the machine’s thousands of component parts and used 3,500 relays. The Mark 1 produced mathematical tables but was soon superseded by electronic stored-program computers.
  • First Computer Program to Run on a Computer

    First Computer Program to Run on a Computer
    University of Manchester researchers develop the Small-Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM), was built to test a new memory technology developed by Williams and Kilburn -- soon known as the Williams Tube – which was the first high-speed electronic random access memory for computers. Their first program, consisting of seventeen instructions and ran on June 21st, 1948. This was the first program in history to run on a digital, electronic, stored-program computer.
  • IBM 650

    IBM 650
    IBM 650 was the first mass-produced computer, with the company selling 450 in just one year. Spinning at 12,500 rpm, the 650´s magnetic data-storage drum allowed much faster access to stored information than other drum-based machines. The Model 650 was also highly popular in universities, where a generation of students first learned programming.
  • Keyboard input to computers

    Keyboard input to computers
    At MIT, researchers experimenting with keyboard input to computers, a normal mode of operation today. Before the keyboard users fed their programs into a computer using punched cards or paper tape. Researchers contended an electrically-controlled typewriter to an MIT computer Whirlwind computer confirmed how useful and convenient a keyboard input device could be.
  • DEC PDP-1

    DEC PDP-1
    The typical PDP-1 computer system, which sells for about $120,000, includes a cathode ray tube graphic display, paper tape input/output, needs no air conditioning and requires only one operator; all of which become standards for minicomputers. Its large scope intrigued early hackers at MIT, who wrote the first computerized video game, SpaceWar!, as well as programs to play music. More than 50 PDP-1s were sold.
  • IBM 1400 series

    IBM 1400 series
    The 1401 mainframe, replaces earlier vacuum tube technology with smaller, more reliable transistors. Demand called for more than 12,000 of the 1401 computers, and the machine´s success made a strong case for using general-purpose computers rather than specialized systems. By the mid-1960s, nearly half of all computers in the world were IBM 1401s.
  • The Atlas Computer

    The Atlas Computer
    A joint project of England’s Manchester University, Ferranti Computers, and Plessey, Atlas comes online nine years after Manchester’s computer lab begins exploring transistor technology. Atlas was the fastest computer in the world at the time and introduced the concept of “virtual memory,” that is, using a disk or drum as an extension of main memory. System control was provided through the Atlas Supervisor, which some consider to be the first true operating system.
  • PDP-8

    PDP-8
    A Canadian Nuclear Lab needed a device to monitor a reactor. Two engineers from Digital Equipment Corporation develop a small, general purpose computer and program it to do the job. The PDP-8 was born, the first successful minicomputer. It sold for $18,000, one-fifth the price of a small IBM 360 mainframe. Because of its speed, small size, and reasonable cost, the PDP-8 was sold by the thousands to manufacturing plants, small businesses, and scientific laboratories around the world.
  • Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC)

    Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC)
    Designed by scientists and engineers at MIT, the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) is the culmination of years of work to reduce the size of the Apollo spacecraft computer from the size of seven refrigerators side-by-side to a compact unit weighing only 70 lbs. and taking up a volume of less than 1 cubic foot. The AGC was one of the earliest uses of integrated circuits, and used core memory, as well as read-only magnetic rope memory.
  • Intel introduces the first microprocessor

    Intel introduces the first microprocessor
    The first advertisement for a microprocessor, the Intel 4004, appears in Electronic News. Developed for Busicom, a Japanese calculator maker, the 4004 had 2250 transistors and could perform up to 90,000 operations per second in four-bit chunks. Federico Faggin led the design and Ted Hoff led the architecture.
  • Xerox PARC Alto

    Xerox PARC Alto
    The Alto is a groundbreaking computer with wide influence on the computer industry. It was based on a graphical user interface using windows, icons, and a mouse, and worked together with other Altos over a local area network. It could also share files and print out documents on an advanced Xerox laser printer. Applications were also highly innovative: a WYSISYG word processor known as “Bravo,” a paint program, a graphics editor, and email for example.
  • Apple Computer launches the Macintosh

    Apple Computer launches the Macintosh
    Apple introduces the Macintosh! The Macintosh was the first successful mouse-driven computer with a graphical user interface and was based on the Motorola 68000 microprocessor. Its price was $2,500. Applications that came as part of the package included MacPaint, which made use of the mouse, and MacWrite, which demonstrated WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) word processing.
  • Palm Pilot

    Palm Pilot
    The first generation of Palm-produced devices, the Palm 1000 and 5000, are based around a Motorola microprocessor running at 16MHz, and uses a special gestural input language called “Graffiti,” which is quick to learn and fast. Palm could be connected to a PC or Mac using a serial port to synchronize – “sync” – both computer and Palm. The company called it a ‘connected organizer’ rather than a PDA to emphasize this ability.
  • The Apple iPhone

    The Apple iPhone
    Apple launches the iPhone - a combination of web browser, music player and cell phone - which could download new functionality in the form of "apps" (applications) from the online Apple store. The touchscreen enabled smartphone also had built-in GPS navigation, high-definition camera, texting, calendar, voice dictation, and weather reports.