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	<title>THE ULTIMATED READING STORE</title>
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	<link>http://allreaders.info</link>
	<description>all reading materials about of universal</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 17:10:48 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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		<title>Statistcs and Cell Phone</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=215</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=215#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 17:10:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=215</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As cell phone use has become more widespread, a number of different studies have been done that deal with cell phone users. The following are a few of the statistics that have resulted from these studies.
A growing concern about cell phone use is the fact that many people accept calls while they are driving. According [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As cell phone use has become more widespread, a number of different studies have been done that deal with cell phone users. The following are a few of the statistics that have resulted from these studies.</p>
<p>A growing concern about cell phone use is the fact that many people accept calls while they are driving. According to a number of studies, 73% of all cell phone users talk while they are driving. This statistic means that at any given minute on United States&#8217; highways, 10% of all drivers are using these devices.</p>
<p>One study examined how well these individuals drive when they are distracted by a cell phone call. It was discovered that these drivers are 21% less likely to change lanes in medium traffic. In heavy traffic, the percentage was 19%. A cell phone user was also more likely to remain behind a slower moving vehicle. In light traffic, these individuals spent 31% more time behind a slower car than a normal driver did. In medium traffic, the rate was 16%. In heavier traffic, the driver spent 12% more time behind the other driver. These drivers also drove 2 mph slower than a normal driver did.</p>
<p>Another area of cell phone use that has been studied deals with children and the use of cell phones. The number of children that have cell phones is astounding. In the United States, about two-thirds of all children have cell phones. In Japan, 80% of high schools students and 25% of junior high school kids are carrying these devices. Great Britain and Scandinavia also have high percentages of children with cell phones.</p>
<p>The question of child safety is also an issue that has been addressed. According to one study, 37% of Japanese teenage males and 30% of Japanese teenage female have used their cell phones to access dating sites, leading to some of these children having unwanted sexual relations.</p>
<p>As well as becoming prey for sexual predators, unwanted cell phone messages from other children are also a problem. In one British study, 16% of young cell phone users have received threatening text messages from their peers, while another 7% have admitted to being harassed in chat rooms. 4% of these youngsters have been &#8220;bullied&#8221; via their cell phone. All these studies point to the problems that can arise from children having cell phones.</p>
<p>Another study that has been conducted among cell phone users has to do cell phone addiction. Cell phone addition is defined as the inability of a person to live without their cell phone. While some individuals argue that this is not a true addiction, some of these studies show otherwise. For example, in Japan, children who had cell phones did not make friends with peers who did not have them. In Hungary, three quarters of all children have these devices. Adolescents in Italy have multiple cell phones while in Great Britain 36% of all college students admitted that they could not live without these devices. 7% of the British students also stated that they had lost jobs or relationships due to their cell phone use.</p>
<p>The one thing that you can conclude form all of these studies is the fact that cell phones are becoming a major part of almost everyone&#8217;s lives. Whether this phenomenon is for the better or worst still remains to be seen.</p>
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		<title>Maximize the Battery Life of Your MacBook Pro</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=210</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=210#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 17:06:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=210</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nothing is more frustrating than using your MacBook Pro outside the home or the office only to find out that your battery is fast draining because you have actually overused or misused it. What if you have a presentation to do or an emergency email you have to send out and the battery of your [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nothing is more frustrating than using your MacBook Pro outside the home or the office only to find out that your battery is fast draining because you have actually overused or misused it. What if you have a presentation to do or an emergency email you have to send out and the battery of your MacBook Pro just died down? What are you going to do? Remember, not always will there be an Apple store around the corner where you can get a replacement battery.</p>
<p>Learn how to maximize the battery life of you MacBook Pro so that you won’t have to worry about it again, especially when you are somewhere without an electric socket! Below are some tips you should keep in mind when working with your MacBook Pro to prolong its battery life.</p>
<p>1. Every time you turn on your MacBook Pro, make sure that its battery is fully charged.</p>
<p>2. During Software Updates installation, keep them running as these updates sometimes improve the life of your MacBook Pro’s battery.</p>
<p>3. Once in a while, discharge the battery of your MacBook Pro – about once a month should be enough. Run it until it shuts down or outs itself to sleep. Then when the battery is already drained, plug the MacBook Pro to recharge.</p>
<p>4. Make sure that you use and store your MacBook Pro under recommended room temperature which is between 50 and 95 degrees Fahrenheit. Anywhere higher or lower than these temperatures might damage not only the battery, but your MacBook Pro, as well.</p>
<p>5. To minimize battery usage, keep the brightness level of your MacBook Pro to a minimum. The brighter the screen is, the more power the battery consumes. Also, turn off the backlight on your keyboard by using the F5 key to minimize power consumption.</p>
<p>6. Turn off the Bluetooth function on your MacBook Pro when you are not using it as it uses a lot of power. To turn off Bluetooth, Open System Preferences, click on Bluetooth, and mark as uncheck the box next to “ON”.</p>
<p>7. Turn off or disable AirPort (Wi-Fi function) when you are not using it. To turn it off, Open System Preferences, click on Network, and click on the Turn AirPort Off button.</p>
<p>8. If you will keep your MacBook Pro plugged in or stored for a long period of time, it is best to remove the battery. In storing the battery, keep it under room temperature and away from heat to prolong its life.</p>
<p>While you can always have a replacement for your damaged or dead MacBook Pro battery from Apple stores, it is still best to preserve and prolong its life to avoid any more hassles. By keeping in mind these simple but important safety tips, you can be sure that the battery of your MacBook Pro will last long.</p>
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		<title>Five Easy Steps to Setup A Wireless Printer</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=208</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=208#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 17:03:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=208</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With wireless networks becoming the norm in network computing both at home and in offices, it is not surprising that these users of wireless networks are now turning as well to setting up a wireless printer to address whatever printing needs that they may have. After all, since wireless printers do not require Ethernet or [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With wireless networks becoming the norm in network computing both at home and in offices, it is not surprising that these users of wireless networks are now turning as well to setting up a wireless printer to address whatever printing needs that they may have. After all, since wireless printers do not require Ethernet or local area network cables, it is more economical to install them instead of laying out meters upon meters of network cables either at home or in the office. </p>
<p>Setting up a wireless printer is not a complicated matter to accomplish. It can take as short as five steps to get the whole thing done.</p>
<p>Step #1: The Location of the Wireless Printer.</p>
<p>Since more than one computer would be making use of the wireless printer. It makes sense to figure out the best place to put it. The wireless printer should be set up at a place at home or in the office that is accessible to everyone and where there is ample space for paper, printer ink and other such paraphernalia.</p>
<p>Step #2: Bluetooth or Wi-Fi?</p>
<p>There are two connectivity choices when it comes to setting up a wireless printer, and these two choices are none other than Bluetooth or Wi-Fi. Most new computers and printers nowadays are equipped with either Bluetooth or Wi-Fi capacities, but if not, it is easy to get a wireless card that can be plugged using a USB port. The only difference is that Bluetooth printers has a smaller range than Wi-Fi.</p>
<p>Step #3: Enable Printer Sharing</p>
<p>The server computer’s operating system must be informed that the printer that will be added to its network is a wireless printer. In Windows Vista, this is done by accessing the network settings in the Control Panel and then activating file and printer sharing in the local area network settings.</p>
<p>Step #4: Share the Printer.</p>
<p>The other computers on the network must also be set up for using the wireless printer. To do this in Windows Vista, open the Control Panel in the classic view and then open Printers. Right click on the printer that is going to be shared, and then open Properties. In Properties, check the box that allows the printer to be a shared device.</p>
<p>Step #5: Continuous Troubleshooting</p>
<p>Wireless networks are prone to interruptions, and so it is important for whoever it is that is maintaining the wireless network at home or at the office to keep the connections to the wireless printer active. Nothing is more irritating that setting up a wireless printer and then encountering numerous glitches afterwards.</p>
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		<title>Software &amp; Utilities</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=206</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=206#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 16:54:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=206</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Computer software &#038; software utilities. Computer software is used on a computer system, and is usually a list of specialized instructions controlling the functions of a computer during an output exercise, such as a printing of a document. There are many different software types used on a computer system, organized in layers. The lower layers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Computer software &#038; software utilities. Computer software is used on a computer system, and is usually a list of specialized instructions controlling the functions of a computer during an output exercise, such as a printing of a document. There are many different software types used on a computer system, organized in layers. The lower layers are nearer to the hardware of the machine, the higher layers to the human operator. Human operators don&#8217;t usually work with lower level programs, choosing rather to use compilers or language translators to make the functions easier to understand. The links contained herein offer information about computer and Internet software and utilities. </p>
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		<title>Computer Education and Learning</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=204</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=204#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 16:53:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=204</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Education has been a cornerstone of the civilized world for many years. Society&#8217;s need for experienced workers and the necessary educational institutions to train them has increased dramatically and the demand continues to grow due to new commercial and technological advances. This section describes the history, philosophy, various types of education and the institutions and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Education has been a cornerstone of the civilized world for many years. Society&#8217;s need for experienced workers and the necessary educational institutions to train them has increased dramatically and the demand continues to grow due to new commercial and technological advances. This section describes the history, philosophy, various types of education and the institutions and companies that are involved in furthering educational goals. Below is a list of links that provide information pertaining to educational resources offered by the computer industry. </p>
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		<title>Computer Industry</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=202</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=202#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 16:52:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=202</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Computer Industry
Computer Industry Reference &#038; Resources. Market research on the computer industry is available from research centers, trade organizations, the media, university departments, and government sources. Statistics and commentary include overviews of the industry, including timelines, current usage, forecasted growth, and competitive information such as sales and shipment forecasts, market share, and planned consumer purchase [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Computer Industry<br />
Computer Industry Reference &#038; Resources. Market research on the computer industry is available from research centers, trade organizations, the media, university departments, and government sources. Statistics and commentary include overviews of the industry, including timelines, current usage, forecasted growth, and competitive information such as sales and shipment forecasts, market share, and planned consumer purchase information. Data, including articles and statistics, cover specific areas of the industry or specific products. These include computer systems, peripherals, software, storage, the Internet, and telecommunications. The links included herein relate to the computer industry reference and resources. </p>
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		<title>Charles Babbage and Names of Modern inventors Computer Accessories.</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=200</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=200#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 16:51:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=200</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Charles Babbage, the person who invented the computer, was also a profound philosopher. He was the person who broke the indecipherable cipher and tried to establish the reason of man&#8217;s creation.
&#8220;I am thinking that all these logarithmic tables might be calculated by machinery.&#8221; &#8211; Charles Babbage. His distaste for the errors that were committed while [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Charles Babbage, the person who invented the computer, was also a profound philosopher. He was the person who broke the indecipherable cipher and tried to establish the reason of man&#8217;s creation.<br />
&#8220;I am thinking that all these logarithmic tables might be calculated by machinery.&#8221; &#8211; Charles Babbage. His distaste for the errors that were committed while calculating various equations using logarithmic tables, forced him to design various calculating machines (analytical and difference engines). There is a lot that went into the invention of computers. </p>
<p>Who Invented the Computer?</p>
<p>&#8220;Who invented the computer and what year?&#8221; The answer to the first part of the question is Charles Babbage. Interestingly, the implementation of the design of what should have been the first computer was actually completed in 1989. But, if the question is &#8220;Who invented the computer first and electronically?&#8221; then it is John Presper Eckert &#038; John W. Mauchly. They built the ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer). Then why is Charles Babbage given the credit of inventing the computer? Charles Babbage was the first person to introduce the idea of &#8220;programmable machines&#8221;. Charles Babbage hardly imagined that his distaste for human errors would one day result in inventions such as desktop computers and laptop computers.</p>
<p>To reach today&#8217;s era of artificial intelligence, natural language processing and high power processing, computer inventions had to go through various generations. This all started with Charles Babbage&#8217;s difference engine in 1822. The difference engines and analytical engines (if completed) would be heavily mechanical. Their weight would be in tons (although analytical and difference engine are not considered to be of any generation, let us consider them to be of zeroth generation for the sake of reference). The main feature of first generation (1940 &#8211; 1956) computers was vacuum tubes. The architecture of second generation (1956 &#8211; 1963) computers was based on transistors. Third generation computers (1964 &#8211; 1971) saw the introduction of integrated circuits. And fourth generation (1971 &#8211; present) computers are based on microprocessors. And now we are in the fifth generation (present &#8211; henceforth) of computers, where artificial intelligence takes precedence. Following is the story of the man who invented the computer, and when he did that, little did the world know that Charles Babbage had managed to alter the course of history .</p>
<p>Early Years</p>
<p>Charles&#8217; father, Benjamin Babbage, was a businessman. Therefore, money wasn&#8217;t a hindrance for young Charles&#8217; education. Young Charles went to many schools and was home tutored before he went to Helmond Academy in Baker street. This is where his romance with mathematics began. Later he went to Cambridge for further studies. He was subsequently transferred to Peterhouse Cambridge where he studied analytical philosophy and computer science. However, he never really graduated with honors. Charles Babbage was later conferred with an honorary degree in mathematics.</p>
<p>Since Charles Babbage was a profound mathematician, he soon started researching on various mathematical subjects. While doing so, he had to encounter a lot of logarithmic calculations. The only way to perform these calculations was through the use of logarithmic tables. Since there were no mechanical calculators in those times, the use of logarithmic tables became very tedious and erroneous. This experience was very hampering to the study of mathematics. Also, the accurate results would take forever to be calculated, hence, Charles decided to design a machine, which not only would save time but (more importantly) be accurate as well.</p>
<p>Design of Charles&#8217; Computer</p>
<p>In the early nineteenth century, mathematical tables were calculated by &#8216;computers&#8217;. These were people who were assigned the task of computing, and hence were called computers. Due to this, there was a high rate of errors. Having studied computer science and being an acclaimed mathematician, it was obvious to him that he should build a calculating machine. Babbage started working on the design of an engine which would analyze input and give appropriate output.</p>
<p>Since his design was meant to eliminate differential errors involving mathematical tables, it was called &#8216;difference engine&#8217;. Difference engine was to calculate the finite differences, and thereby avoid the need for multiplication and division. But unfortunately, due to the huge size and the complexity of the design, Charles Babbage couldn&#8217;t complete it. But this did not deter him from designing difference engine 2, which was an improved version of the original difference engine.</p>
<p>After his failure to implement his designs of difference engine, Charles Babbage came to the conclusion that his engine designs needed improvement. He then started to design engines that were better in analysis than their predecessors. The successive designs were more efficient and complex than the previous ones. These complex machines were called analytical engines. Due to continuous work in the design, any one machine couldn&#8217;t be called an analytical engine. His final design of the analytical engine was implemented only in 1989, which is far more accurate than today&#8217;s electronic calculator.</p>
<p>A Few Interesting Facts about Charles&#8217; Kookiness<br />
•Charles Babbage had a flair for breaking highly complicated ciphers and never claimed credit for it<br />
•He invented the ophthalmoscope, and completely forgot about it. It was eventually invented independently by Harmonn Von Helmholts<br />
•Charles Babbage coined the principle: Paying high to highly skilled workers saved cost.<br />
•He published &#8220;Ninth Bridge Water Treatise&#8221;, which basically gave reason for the creation of man.<br />
•Wrote to Alfred Tennyson that his assumption in a poem was wrong.<br />
A Few other Interesting Facts </p>
<p>Question: Who invented the mouse?<br />
Answer: Douglas Engelbart.</p>
<p>Question: Who invented the keyboard?<br />
Answer: Christopher Latham Sholes.</p>
<p>Question: Who invented the computer compiler?<br />
Answer: Howard Aiken and Grace Hopper.</p>
<p>Question: Who invented the computer monitor?<br />
Answer: Allen B. DuMont. </p>
<p>Question: Who invented the computer printer?<br />
Answer: Chester Carlson. </p>
<p>John Vincent Atanasoff, J. Prespert Eckert and John W. Mauchly are inventors who are also credited with inventing the 20th century modern computers, their creation was called ‘Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer’. Charles Babbage is fondly remembered for the invention of the computer, and has had a very deep impact on the history of computers. Along with Ada Lovelace, he was among the first few computer programmers. But he always wished to be remembered, not as the one who invented the computer, but as a great mathematician. </p>
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		<title>Who Invented the First Computer?</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=198</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=198#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 16:46:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=198</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The answer to this question depends of your definition of a computer.
The first known counting devices or tools were Tally Sticks from about 35,000 BC. The Abacus was then invented by the Babylonians in 2400 BC.
In 1837, Charles Babbage, a British professor of mathematics described his idea for the Analytical Engine, the first stored-program mechanical [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The answer to this question depends of your definition of a computer.</p>
<p>The first known counting devices or tools were Tally Sticks from about 35,000 BC. The Abacus was then invented by the Babylonians in 2400 BC.</p>
<p>In 1837, Charles Babbage, a British professor of mathematics described his idea for the Analytical Engine, the first stored-program mechanical computer. The Analytical Engine was designed to be powered by a steam engine and was to use Punched Cards, which was used to program mechanical looms at the time.</p>
<p>What made the Analytical Engine unique was that it was designed to be programmed. It was because of this and the fact that it would be more than 100 years that any similar devices would be constructed, Charles Babbage, would be considered by many as the “father of computing”. Because of legal, financial, and political obstacles, the Analytical Machine would never be completed. Charles Babbage was also difficult to work with and alienated the supporters of his work.</p>
<p>In 1939, John V. Atanasoff and Clifford Berry developed the Atanasoff-Berry Computer (ABC) at Iowa State University, which was regarded as the first electronic digital computer. The ABC was built by hand and the design used over 300 Vacuum Tubes and had capacitors fixed in a mechanically rotating drum for memory.</p>
<p>The ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer), constructed in the US in 1943, is widely regarded as the first functionally useful electronic general-purpose computer. Influenced by the ABC, it was a turning point in the history of computing and was used to perform ballistics trajectory calculations and used 160 kW of power. World War II is known to be the driving force of computing hardware development and one of such use of computers was in communications encryption and decryption.</p>
<p>The UNIVAC I (Universal Automatic Computer) was the first commercially available, “mass produced” electronic computer manufactured by Remington Rand in the USA and was delivered to the US Census Bureau in June 1951. It used 5,200 vacuum tubes and consumed 125 kW of power. 46 machines were sold at more than $1 million each.</p>
<p>The microprocessor eventually led to the development of the microcomputer, small, low-cost computers that individuals and small businesses could afford. By the 1990s, the microcomputer or Personal Computer (PC) became a common household appliance, and became even more widespread with the advent of the Internet.</p>
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		<title>An Illustrated History of Computers Part 4</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=196</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=196#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 16:44:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=196</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The title of forefather of today&#8217;s all-electronic digital computers is usually awarded to ENIAC, which stood for Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator. ENIAC was built at the University of Pennsylvania between 1943 and 1945 by two professors, John Mauchly and the 24 year old J. Presper Eckert, who got funding from the war department after [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The title of forefather of today&#8217;s all-electronic digital computers is usually awarded to ENIAC, which stood for Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator. ENIAC was built at the University of Pennsylvania between 1943 and 1945 by two professors, John Mauchly and the 24 year old J. Presper Eckert, who got funding from the war department after promising they could build a machine that would replace all the &#8220;computers&#8221;, meaning the women who were employed calculating the firing tables for the army&#8217;s artillery guns. The day that Mauchly and Eckert saw the first small piece of ENIAC work, the persons they ran to bring to their lab to show off their progress were some of these female computers (one of whom remarked, &#8220;I was astounded that it took all this equipment to multiply 5 by 1000&#8243;). </p>
<p>ENIAC filled a 20 by 40 foot room, weighed 30 tons, and used more than 18,000 vacuum tubes. Like the Mark I, ENIAC employed paper card readers obtained from IBM (these were a regular product for IBM, as they were a long established part of business accounting machines, IBM&#8217;s forte). When operating, the ENIAC was silent but you knew it was on as the 18,000 vacuum tubes each generated waste heat like a light bulb and all this heat (174,000 watts of heat) meant that the computer could only be operated in a specially designed room with its own heavy duty air conditioning system. Only the left half of ENIAC is visible in the first picture, the right half was basically a mirror image of what&#8217;s visible. </p>
<p>Two views of ENIAC: the &#8220;Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator&#8221; (note that it wasn&#8217;t even given the name of computer since &#8220;computers&#8221; were people) [U.S. Army photo] </p>
<p>To reprogram the ENIAC you had to rearrange the patch cords that you can observe on the left in the prior photo, and the settings of 3000 switches that you can observe on the right. To program a modern computer, you type out a program with statements like: </p>
<p>    Circumference = 3.14 * diameter</p>
<p>To perform this computation on ENIAC you had to rearrange a large number of patch cords and then locate three particular knobs on that vast wall of knobs and set them to 3, 1, and 4. </p>
<p>Reprogramming ENIAC involved a hike [U.S. Army photo]<br />
Once the army agreed to fund ENIAC, Mauchly and Eckert worked around the clock, seven days a week, hoping to complete the machine in time to contribute to the war. Their war-time effort was so intense that most days they ate all 3 meals in the company of the army Captain who was their liaison with their military sponsors. They were allowed a small staff but soon observed that they could hire only the most junior members of the University of Pennsylvania staff because the more experienced faculty members knew that their proposed machine would never work. </p>
<p>One of the most obvious problems was that the design would require 18,000 vacuum tubes to all work simultaneously. Vacuum tubes were so notoriously unreliable that even twenty years later many neighborhood drug stores provided a &#8220;tube tester&#8221; that allowed homeowners to bring in the vacuum tubes from their television sets and determine which one of the tubes was causing their TV to fail. And television sets only incorporated about 30 vacuum tubes. The device that used the largest number of vacuum tubes was an electronic organ: it incorporated 160 tubes. The idea that 18,000 tubes could function together was considered so unlikely that the dominant vacuum tube supplier of the day, RCA, refused to join the project (but did supply tubes in the interest of &#8220;wartime cooperation&#8221;). Eckert solved the tube reliability problem through extremely careful circuit design. He was so thorough that before he chose the type of wire cabling he would employ in ENIAC he first ran an experiment where he starved lab rats for a few days and then gave them samples of all the available types of cable to determine which they least liked to eat. Here&#8217;s a look at a small number of the vacuum tubes in ENIAC: </p>
<p>Even with 18,000 vacuum tubes, ENIAC could only hold 20 numbers at a time. However, thanks to the elimination of moving parts it ran much faster than the Mark I: a multiplication that required 6 seconds on the Mark I could be performed on ENIAC in 2.8 thousandths of a second. ENIAC&#8217;s basic clock speed was 100,000 cycles per second. Today&#8217;s home computers employ clock speeds of 1,000,000,000 cycles per second. Built with $500,000 from the U.S. Army, ENIAC&#8217;s first task was to compute whether or not it was possible to build a hydrogen bomb (the atomic bomb was completed during the war and hence is older than ENIAC). The very first problem run on ENIAC required only 20 seconds and was checked against an answer obtained after forty hours of work with a mechanical calculator. After chewing on half a million punch cards for six weeks, ENIAC did humanity no favor when it declared the hydrogen bomb feasible. This first ENIAC program remains classified even today. </p>
<p>Once ENIAC was finished and proved worthy of the cost of its development, its designers set about to eliminate the obnoxious fact that reprogramming the computer required a physical modification of all the patch cords and switches. It took days to change ENIAC&#8217;s program. Eckert and Mauchly&#8217;s next teamed up with the mathematician John von Neumann to design EDVAC, which pioneered the stored program. Because he was the first to publish a description of this new computer, von Neumann is often wrongly credited with the realization that the program (that is, the sequence of computation steps) could be represented electronically just as the data was. But this major breakthrough can be found in Eckert&#8217;s notes long before he ever started working with von Neumann. Eckert was no slouch: while in high school Eckert had scored the second highest math SAT score in the entire country. </p>
<p>After ENIAC and EDVAC came other computers with humorous names such as ILLIAC, JOHNNIAC, and, of course, MANIAC. ILLIAC was built at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, which is probably why the science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke chose to have the HAL computer of his famous book &#8220;2001: A Space Odyssey&#8221; born at Champaign-Urbana. Have you ever noticed that you can shift each of the letters of IBM backward by one alphabet position and get HAL? </p>
<p>ILLIAC II built at the University of Illinois (it is a good thing computers were one-of-a-kind creations in these days, can you imagine being asked to duplicate this?) </p>
<p>HAL from the movie &#8220;2001: A Space Odyssey&#8221;. Look at the previous picture to understand why the movie makers in 1968 assumed computers of the future would be things you walk into.<br />
JOHNNIAC was a reference to John von Neumann, who was unquestionably a genius. At age 6 he could tell jokes in classical Greek. By 8 he was doing calculus. He could recite books he had read years earlier word for word. He could read a page of the phone directory and then recite it backwards. On one occasion it took von Neumann only 6 minutes to solve a problem in his head that another professor had spent hours on using a mechanical calculator. Von Neumann is perhaps most famous (infamous?) as the man who worked out the complicated method needed to detonate an atomic bomb. </p>
<p>Once the computer&#8217;s program was represented electronically, modifications to that program could happen as fast as the computer could compute. In fact, computer programs could now modify themselves while they ran (such programs are called self-modifying programs). This introduced a new way for a program to fail: faulty logic in the program could cause it to damage itself. This is one source of the general protection fault famous in MS-DOS and the blue screen of death famous in Windows. </p>
<p>Today, one of the most notable characteristics of a computer is the fact that its ability to be reprogrammed allows it to contribute to a wide variety of endeavors, such as the following completely unrelated fields: </p>
<p>the creation of special effects for movies,<br />
the compression of music to allow more minutes of music to fit within the limited memory of an MP3 player,<br />
the observation of car tire rotation to detect and prevent skids in an anti-lock braking system (ABS),<br />
the analysis of the writing style in Shakespeare&#8217;s work with the goal of proving whether a single individual really was responsible for all these pieces.<br />
By the end of the 1950&#8217;s computers were no longer one-of-a-kind hand built devices owned only by universities and government research labs. Eckert and Mauchly left the University of Pennsylvania over a dispute about who owned the patents for their invention. They decided to set up their own company. Their first product was the famous UNIVAC computer, the first commercial (that is, mass produced) computer. In the 50&#8217;s, UNIVAC (a contraction of &#8220;Universal Automatic Computer&#8221;) was the household word for &#8220;computer&#8221; just as &#8220;Kleenex&#8221; is for &#8220;tissue&#8221;. The first UNIVAC was sold, appropriately enough, to the Census bureau. UNIVAC was also the first computer to employ magnetic tape. Many people still confuse a picture of a reel-to-reel tape recorder with a picture of a mainframe computer. </p>
<p>A reel-to-reel tape drive [photo courtesy of The Computer Museum]<br />
ENIAC was unquestionably the origin of the U.S. commercial computer industry, but its inventors, Mauchly and Eckert, never achieved fortune from their work and their company fell into financial problems and was sold at a loss. By 1955 IBM was selling more computers than UNIVAC and by the 1960&#8217;s the group of eight companies selling computers was known as &#8220;IBM and the seven dwarfs&#8221;. IBM grew so dominant that the federal government pursued anti-trust proceedings against them from 1969 to 1982 (notice the pace of our country&#8217;s legal system). You might wonder what type of event is required to dislodge an industry heavyweight. In IBM&#8217;s case it was their own decision to hire an unknown but aggressive firm called Microsoft to provide the software for their personal computer (PC). This lucrative contract allowed Microsoft to grow so dominant that by the year 2000 their market capitalization (the total value of their stock) was twice that of IBM and they were convicted in Federal Court of running an illegal monopoly. </p>
<p>If you learned computer programming in the 1970&#8217;s, you dealt with what today are called mainframe computers, such as the IBM 7090 (shown below), IBM 360, or IBM 370. </p>
<p>The IBM 7094, a typical mainframe computer [photo courtesy of IBM] </p>
<p>There were 2 ways to interact with a mainframe. The first was called time sharing because the computer gave each user a tiny sliver of time in a round-robin fashion. Perhaps 100 users would be simultaneously logged on, each typing on a teletype such as the following: </p>
<p>The Teletype was the standard mechanism used to interact with a time-sharing computer<br />
A teletype was a motorized typewriter that could transmit your keystrokes to the mainframe and then print the computer&#8217;s response on its roll of paper. You typed a single line of text, hit the carriage return button, and waited for the teletype to begin noisily printing the computer&#8217;s response (at a whopping 10 characters per second). On the left-hand side of the teletype in the prior picture you can observe a paper tape reader and writer (i.e., puncher). Here&#8217;s a close-up of paper tape: </p>
<p>Three views of paper tape </p>
<p>After observing the holes in paper tape it is perhaps obvious why all computers use binary numbers to represent data: a binary bit (that is, one digit of a binary number) can only have the value of 0 or 1 (just as a decimal digit can only have the value of 0 thru 9). Something which can only take two states is very easy to manufacture, control, and sense. In the case of paper tape, the hole has either been punched or it has not. Electro-mechanical computers such as the Mark I used relays to represent data because a relay (which is just a motor driven switch) can only be open or closed. The earliest all-electronic computers used vacuum tubes as switches: they too were either open or closed. Transistors replaced vacuum tubes because they too could act as switches but were smaller, cheaper, and consumed less power. </p>
<p>Paper tape has a long history as well. It was first used as an information storage medium by Sir Charles Wheatstone, who used it to store Morse code that was arriving via the newly invented telegraph (incidentally, Wheatstone was also the inventor of the accordion). </p>
<p>The alternative to time sharing was batch mode processing, where the computer gives its full attention to your program. In exchange for getting the computer&#8217;s full attention at run-time, you had to agree to prepare your program off-line on a key punch machine which generated punch cards. </p>
<p>An IBM Key Punch machine which operates like a typewriter except it produces punched cards rather than a printed sheet of paper<br />
University students in the 1970&#8217;s bought blank cards a linear foot at a time from the university bookstore. Each card could hold only 1 program statement. To submit your program to the mainframe, you placed your stack of cards in the hopper of a card reader. Your program would be run whenever the computer made it that far. You often submitted your deck and then went to dinner or to bed and came back later hoping to see a successful printout showing your results. Obviously, a program run in batch mode could not be interactive. </p>
<p>But things changed fast. By the 1990&#8217;s a university student would typically own his own computer and have exclusive use of it in his dorm room. </p>
<p>The original IBM Personal Computer (PC)<br />
This transformation was a result of the invention of the microprocessor. A microprocessor (uP) is a computer that is fabricated on an integrated circuit (IC). Computers had been around for 20 years before the first microprocessor was developed at Intel in 1971. The micro in the name microprocessor refers to the physical size. Intel didn&#8217;t invent the electronic computer. But they were the first to succeed in cramming an entire computer on a single chip (IC). Intel was started in 1968 and initially produced only semiconductor memory (Intel invented both the DRAM and the EPROM, two memory technologies that are still going strong today). In 1969 they were approached by Busicom, a Japanese manufacturer of high performance calculators (these were typewriter sized units, the first shirt-pocket sized scientific calculator was the Hewlett-Packard HP35 introduced in 1972). Busicom wanted Intel to produce 12 custom calculator chips: one chip dedicated to the keyboard, another chip dedicated to the display, another for the printer, etc. But integrated circuits were (and are) expensive to design and this approach would have required Busicom to bear the full expense of developing 12 new chips since these 12 chips would only be of use to them. </p>
<p>A typical Busicom desk calculator<br />
But a new Intel employee (Ted Hoff) convinced Busicom to instead accept a general purpose computer chip which, like all computers, could be reprogrammed for many different tasks (like controlling a keyboard, a display, a printer, etc.). Intel argued that since the chip could be reprogrammed for alternative purposes, the cost of developing it could be spread out over more users and hence would be less expensive to each user. The general purpose computer is adapted to each new purpose by writing a program which is a sequence of instructions stored in memory (which happened to be Intel&#8217;s forte). Busicom agreed to pay Intel to design a general purpose chip and to get a price break since it would allow Intel to sell the resulting chip to others. But development of the chip took longer than expected and Busicom pulled out of the project. Intel knew it had a winner by that point and gladly refunded all of Busicom&#8217;s investment just to gain sole rights to the device which they finished on their own. </p>
<p>Thus became the Intel 4004, the first microprocessor (uP). The 4004 consisted of 2300 transistors and was clocked at 108 kHz (i.e., 108,000 times per second). Compare this to the 42 million transistors and the 2 GHz clock rate (i.e., 2,000,000,000 times per second) used in a Pentium 4. One of Intel&#8217;s 4004 chips still functions aboard the Pioneer 10 spacecraft, which is now the man-made object farthest from the earth. Curiously, Busicom went bankrupt and never ended up using the ground-breaking microprocessor. </p>
<p>Intel followed the 4004 with the 8008 and 8080. Intel priced the 8080 microprocessor at $360 dollars as an insult to IBM&#8217;s famous 360 mainframe which cost millions of dollars. The 8080 was employed in the MITS Altair computer, which was the world&#8217;s first personal computer (PC). It was personal all right: you had to build it yourself from a kit of parts that arrived in the mail. This kit didn&#8217;t even include an enclosure and that is the reason the unit shown below doesn&#8217;t match the picture on the magazine cover. </p>
<p>The Altair 8800, the first PC<br />
A Harvard freshman by the name of Bill Gates decided to drop out of college so he could concentrate all his time writing programs for this computer. This early experienced put Bill Gates in the right place at the right time once IBM decided to standardize on the Intel microprocessors for their line of PCs in 1981. The Intel Pentium 4 used in today&#8217;s PCs is still compatible with the Intel 8088 used in IBM&#8217;s first PC. </p>
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		<title>An Illustrated History of Computers Part 3</title>
		<link>http://allreaders.info/?p=194</link>
		<comments>http://allreaders.info/?p=194#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 16:41:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hyyat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://allreaders.info/?p=194</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[IBM continued to develop mechanical calculators for sale to businesses to help with financial accounting and inventory accounting. One characteristic of both financial accounting and inventory accounting is that although you need to subtract, you don&#8217;t need negative numbers and you really don&#8217;t have to multiply since multiplication can be accomplished via repeated addition. 
But [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>IBM continued to develop mechanical calculators for sale to businesses to help with financial accounting and inventory accounting. One characteristic of both financial accounting and inventory accounting is that although you need to subtract, you don&#8217;t need negative numbers and you really don&#8217;t have to multiply since multiplication can be accomplished via repeated addition. </p>
<p>But the U.S. military desired a mechanical calculator more optimized for scientific computation. By World War II the U.S. had battleships that could lob shells weighing as much as a small car over distances up to 25 miles. Physicists could write the equations that described how atmospheric drag, wind, gravity, muzzle velocity, etc. would determine the trajectory of the shell. But solving such equations was extremely laborious. This was the work performed by the human computers. Their results would be published in ballistic &#8220;firing tables&#8221; published in gunnery manuals. During World War II the U.S. military scoured the country looking for (generally female) math majors to hire for the job of computing these tables. But not enough humans could be found to keep up with the need for new tables. Sometimes artillery pieces had to be delivered to the battlefield without the necessary firing tables and this meant they were close to useless because they couldn&#8217;t be aimed properly. Faced with this situation, the U.S. military was willing to invest in even hair-brained schemes to automate this type of computation. </p>
<p>One early success was the Harvard Mark I computer which was built as a partnership between Harvard and IBM in 1944. This was the first programmable digital computer made in the U.S. But it was not a purely electronic computer. Instead the Mark I was constructed out of switches, relays, rotating shafts, and clutches. The machine weighed 5 tons, incorporated 500 miles of wire, was 8 feet tall and 51 feet long, and had a 50 ft rotating shaft running its length, turned by a 5 horsepower electric motor. The Mark I ran non-stop for 15 years, sounding like a roomful of ladies knitting. To appreciate the scale of this machine note the four typewriters in the foreground of the following photo. </p>
<p>The Harvard Mark I: an electro-mechanical computer<br />
You can see the 50 ft rotating shaft in the bottom of the prior photo. This shaft was a central power source for the entire machine. This design feature was reminiscent of the days when waterpower was used to run a machine shop and each lathe or other tool was driven by a belt connected to a single overhead shaft which was turned by an outside waterwheel. </p>
<p>A central shaft driven by an outside waterwheel and connected to each machine by overhead belts was the customary power source for all the machines in a factory<br />
Here&#8217;s a close-up of one of the Mark I&#8217;s four paper tape readers. A paper tape was an improvement over a box of punched cards as anyone who has ever dropped &#8212; and thus shuffled &#8212; his &#8220;stack&#8221; knows. </p>
<p>One of the four paper tape readers on the Harvard Mark I (you can observe the punched paper roll emerging from the bottom)<br />
One of the primary programmers for the Mark I was a woman, Grace Hopper. Hopper found the first computer &#8220;bug&#8221;: a dead moth that had gotten into the Mark I and whose wings were blocking the reading of the holes in the paper tape. The word &#8220;bug&#8221; had been used to describe a defect since at least 1889 but Hopper is credited with coining the word &#8220;debugging&#8221; to describe the work to eliminate program faults. </p>
<p>The first computer bug [photo © 2002 IEEE]<br />
In 1953 Grace Hopper invented the first high-level language, &#8220;Flow-matic&#8221;. This language eventually became COBOL which was the language most affected by the infamous Y2K problem. A high-level language is designed to be more understandable by humans than is the binary language understood by the computing machinery. A high-level language is worthless without a program &#8212; known as a compiler &#8212; to translate it into the binary language of the computer and hence Grace Hopper also constructed the world&#8217;s first compiler. Grace remained active as a Rear Admiral in the Navy Reserves until she was 79 (another record). </p>
<p>The Mark I operated on numbers that were 23 digits wide. It could add or subtract two of these numbers in three-tenths of a second, multiply them in four seconds, and divide them in ten seconds. Forty-five years later computers could perform an addition in a billionth of a second! Even though the Mark I had three quarters of a million components, it could only store 72 numbers! Today, home computers can store 30 million numbers in RAM and another 10 billion numbers on their hard disk. Today, a number can be pulled from RAM after a delay of only a few billionths of a second, and from a hard disk after a delay of only a few thousandths of a second. This kind of speed is obviously impossible for a machine which must move a rotating shaft and that is why electronic computers killed off their mechanical predecessors. </p>
<p>On a humorous note, the principal designer of the Mark I, Howard Aiken of Harvard, estimated in 1947 that six electronic digital computers would be sufficient to satisfy the computing needs of the entire United States. IBM had commissioned this study to determine whether it should bother developing this new invention into one of its standard products (up until then computers were one-of-a-kind items built by special arrangement). Aiken&#8217;s prediction wasn&#8217;t actually so bad as there were very few institutions (principally, the government and military) that could afford the cost of what was called a computer in 1947. He just didn&#8217;t foresee the micro-electronics revolution which would allow something like an IBM Stretch computer of 1959: </p>
<p>(that&#8217;s just the operator&#8217;s console, here&#8217;s the rest of its 33 foot length:) </p>
<p>to be bested by a home computer of 1976 such as this Apple I which sold for only $600: </p>
<p>The Apple 1 which was sold as a do-it-yourself kit (without the lovely case seen here)<br />
Computers had been incredibly expensive because they required so much hand assembly, such as the wiring seen in this CDC 7600: </p>
<p>Typical wiring in an early mainframe computer [photo courtesy The Computer Museum]<br />
The microelectronics revolution is what allowed the amount of hand-crafted wiring seen in the prior photo to be mass-produced as an integrated circuit which is a small sliver of silicon the size of your thumbnail . </p>
<p>An integrated circuit (&#8220;silicon chip&#8221;) [photo courtesy of IBM]<br />
The primary advantage of an integrated circuit is not that the transistors (switches) are miniscule (that&#8217;s the secondary advantage), but rather that millions of transistors can be created and interconnected in a mass-production process. All the elements on the integrated circuit are fabricated simultaneously via a small number (maybe 12) of optical masks that define the geometry of each layer. This speeds up the process of fabricating the computer &#8212; and hence reduces its cost &#8212; just as Gutenberg&#8217;s printing press sped up the fabrication of books and thereby made them affordable to all. </p>
<p>The IBM Stretch computer of 1959 needed its 33 foot length to hold the 150,000 transistors it contained. These transistors were tremendously smaller than the vacuum tubes they replaced, but they were still individual elements requiring individual assembly. By the early 1980s this many transistors could be simultaneously fabricated on an integrated circuit. Today&#8217;s Pentium 4 microprocessor contains 42,000,000 transistors in this same thumbnail sized piece of silicon. </p>
<p>It&#8217;s humorous to remember that in between the Stretch machine (which would be called a mainframe today) and the Apple I (a desktop computer) there was an entire industry segment referred to as mini-computers such as the following PDP-12 computer of 1969: </p>
<p>The DEC PDP-12<br />
Sure looks &#8220;mini&#8221;, huh? But we&#8217;re getting ahead of our story. </p>
<p>One of the earliest attempts to build an all-electronic (that is, no gears, cams, belts, shafts, etc.) digital computer occurred in 1937 by J. V. Atanasoff, a professor of physics and mathematics at Iowa State University. By 1941 he and his graduate student, Clifford Berry, had succeeded in building a machine that could solve 29 simultaneous equations with 29 unknowns. This machine was the first to store data as a charge on a capacitor, which is how today&#8217;s computers store information in their main memory (DRAM or dynamic RAM). As far as its inventors were aware, it was also the first to employ binary arithmetic. However, the machine was not programmable, it lacked a conditional branch, its design was appropriate for only one type of mathematical problem, and it was not further pursued after World War II. It&#8217;s inventors didn&#8217;t even bother to preserve the machine and it was dismantled by those who moved into the room where it lay abandoned. </p>
<p>The Atanasoff-Berry Computer [photo © 2002 IEEE]<br />
Another candidate for granddaddy of the modern computer was Colossus, built during World War II by Britain for the purpose of breaking the cryptographic codes used by Germany. Britain led the world in designing and building electronic machines dedicated to code breaking, and was routinely able to read coded Germany radio transmissions. But Colossus was definitely not a general purpose, reprogrammable machine. Note the presence of pulleys in the two photos of Colossus below: </p>
<p>Two views of the code-breaking Colossus of Great Britain </p>
<p>The Harvard Mark I, the Atanasoff-Berry computer, and the British Colossus all made important contributions. American and British computer pioneers were still arguing over who was first to do what, when in 1965 the work of the German Konrad Zuse was published for the first time in English. Scooped! Zuse had built a sequence of general purpose computers in Nazi Germany. The first, the Z1, was built between 1936 and 1938 in the parlor of his parent&#8217;s home. </p>
<p>The Zuse Z1 in its residential setting<br />
Zuse&#8217;s third machine, the Z3, built in 1941, was probably the first operational, general-purpose, programmable (that is, software controlled) digital computer. Without knowledge of any calculating machine inventors since Leibniz (who lived in the 1600&#8217;s), Zuse reinvented Babbage&#8217;s concept of programming and decided on his own to employ binary representation for numbers (Babbage had advocated decimal). The Z3 was destroyed by an Allied bombing raid. The Z1 and Z2 met the same fate and the Z4 survived only because Zuse hauled it in a wagon up into the mountains. Zuse&#8217;s accomplishments are all the more incredible given the context of the material and manpower shortages in Germany during World War II. Zuse couldn&#8217;t even obtain paper tape so he had to make his own by punching holes in discarded movie film. Because these machines were unknown outside Germany, they did not influence the path of computing in America. But their architecture is identical to that still in use today: an arithmetic unit to do the calculations, a memory for storing numbers, a control system to supervise operations, and input and output devices to connect to the external world. Zuse also invented what might be the first high-level computer language, &#8220;Plankalkul&#8221;, though it too was unknown outside Germany. </p>
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