Who invented first computer?
The idea of mechanically calculating mathematical tables first came to Babbage in 1812 or 1813. Later he made a small calculator that could perform certain mathematical computations to eight decimals. Then in 1823 he obtained government support for the design of a projected machine, the Difference Engine, with a 20 decimal capacity. The Difference Engine was a digital device: it operated on discrete digits rather than smooth quantities, and the digits were decimal (0-9), represented by positions on toothed wheels rather than binary digits bits. When one of the toothed wheels turned from nine to zero, it caused the next wheel to advance one position, carrying the digit. Like modern computers, the Difference Engine had storage - that is, a place where data could be held temporarily for later processing. Its construction required the development of mechanical engineering techniques, to which Babbage of necessity devoted himself. In the meantime (1828-39), he served as Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge. However, the full engine, designed to be room-sized, was never built, at least not by Babbage. All design and construction ceased in 1833, when Joseph Clement, the machinist responsible for actually building the machine, refused to continue unless he was prepaid.
During
the mid-1830s Babbage developed plans for the Analytical Engine, the
forerunner of the modern digital computer. In that device he envisioned the
capability of performing any arithmetical operation on the basis of
instructions from punched cards, a memory unit in which to store numbers,
sequential control, and most of the other basic elements of the present-day
computer. As with the Difference Engine, the project was far more complex than
anything theretofore built. The memory unit was to be large enough to hold
1,000 50-digit numbers; this was larger than the storage capacity of any
computer built before 1960. The machine was to be steam-driven and run by one
attendant.
In
1843 Babbage’s friend mathematician Ada Lovelace translated a French
paper about the Analytical Engine and, in her own annotations, published
how it could perform a sequence of calculations, the first computer
program. The Analytical Engine, however, was never completed. Babbage’s design
was forgotten until his unpublished notebooks were discovered in 1937. In 1991
British scientists built Difference Engine No. 2-accurate to 31 digits-to
Babbage’s specifications, and in 2000 the printer for the Difference Engine was
also built. Charles Babbage made
notable contributions in other areas as well. He assisted in establishing the
modern postal system in England and compiled the first
reliable actuarial tables. He also invented a type of speedometer and the
locomotive cowcatcher.
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