Sunday, August 18, 2019
The First Generation Of Computers :: essays research papers
 The First Generation of Computers      The first generation of computers, beginning around the end of World War 2,  and continuing until around the year 1957, included computers that used vacuum  tubes, drum memories, and programming in machine code. Computers at that time  where mammoth machines that did not have the power our present day desktop  microcomputers.         In 1950, the first real-time, interactive computer was completed by a  design team at MIT. The "Whirlwind Computer," as it was called, was a revamped  U.S. Navy project for developing an aircraft simulator. The Whirlwind used a  cathode ray tube and a light gun to provide interactively. The Whirlwind was  linked to a series of radars and could identify unfriendly aircraft and direct  interceptor fighters to their projected locations. It was to be the prototype  for a network of computers and radar sites (SAGE) acting as an important element  of U.S. air defense for a quarter-century after 1958.         In 1951, the first commercially-available computer was delivered to the  Bureau of the Census by the Eckert Mauchly Computer Corporation. The UNIVAC  (Universal Automatic Computer) was the first computer which was not a one-of-a-  kind laboratory instrument. The UNIVAC became a household word in 1952 when it  was used on a televised newscast to project the winner of the Eisenhower-  Stevenson presidential race with stunning accuracy. That same year Maurice V.  Wilkes (developer of EDSAC) laid the foundation for the concepts of  microprogramming, which was to become the guide for computer design and  construction.         In 1954, the first general-purpose computer to be completely  transistorized was built at Bell Laboratories. TRADIC (Transistorized Airborne    					    
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