Lunes, Hulyo 25, 2011

COMPUTER HISTORY

Early Start
Computers have been around for quite a few years.  Some of your parents were probably around in 1951 when the first computer was bought by a business firm.  Computers have changed so rapidly many people can not keep up with changes.
One newspaper tried to relate how the fast changes in computer technology would look to a similar pace in the auto industry:
"Had the automobile developed at a pace (equal) to that of the computer during the past twenty years, today a Rolls Royce would cost less than $3.00, get 3 million miles to the gallon, deliver enough power to drive (the ship) the Queen Elizabeth II, and six of them would fit on the head of a pin!"
These changes have occurred so rapidly that many people do not know how our modern computer got its start.The First Computing Machines "Computers"
Since ancient times, people have had ways to deal with data and numbers.  Early people tied knots in rope and carved marks on clay tablets to keep track of livestock and trade.  Some people considered the 5000 year old ABACUS-- a frame with beads strung on wires to be the first true computing aid.
As trade and tax system grew in complexity, people saw that faster, more reliable and exact tools were needed for doing math and keeping records.
In the mid-1600's, Blaise Pascal and his father, who was a tax officer himself, were working on taxes for the French government in Paris.  The two spent hours figuring and refiguring taxes that each citizen owed.  Young Blaise decided in 1642 to build an adding and subtraction machine that could aide in such a tedious and time consuming process.  The machine Blaise made had a set ofeight gears that worked together much like an odometer keeps track of a car's mileage.  His machine encountered many of problems.  For one, it was always breaking down.  Second, the machine was slow and extremely costly.  And third, people were afraid to use the machine thinking it might replace their jobs.  Pascal later became famous for math and philosophy, but he is still remember for his role in computer technology.  In his honor, there is a computer language named Pascal.
The next big step for computers arrived in the 1830's when Charles Babbage decided to build a machine to help him complete and print mathematical tables.  Babbage was a mathematician who taught at Cambridge University in England.  He began planning his calculating machine calling it the Analytical Engine.  The idea for this machine was amazingly like the computer we know today.  It was to read a program from punched cards, figure and store the answers to different problems, and print the answer on paper.  Babbage died before he could complete the machine.  However because of his remarkable ideas and work, Babbage is know as the Father of Computers.
The next huge step for computers came when Herman Hollerith entered a contest given by the U.S. Census Bureau.  The contest was to see who could build a machine that would count and record information faster.  Hollerith, a young man working for the Bureau built a machine called the Tabulating Machine that read and sorted data from punched cards.  The holes punched in the cards matched each person's answers to questions.  For example, married, single, and divorces were answers on the cards.  The Tabulator read the punched cards as they passed over tiny brushes.  Each time a brush found a hole, it completed an electrical circuit.  This caused special counting dials to increase the data for that answer.
Thanks to Hollerith's machine, instead of taking seven and a half years to count the census information it only took three years, even with 13 million more people since the last census.  Happy with his success, Hollerith formed the Tabulating Machine Company in 1896.  The company later was sold in 1911.  And in 1912 his company became the International Business Machines Corporation, better know today as IBM.
The First Electric Powered Computer
What is considered to be the first computer was made in 1944 by Harvard's Professor Howard Aiken.  The Mark I computer was very much like the design of Charles Babbage's having mainly mechanical parts, but with some electronic parts.  His machine was designed to be programmed to do many computer jobs.  This all-purpose machine is what we now know as the PC or personal computer.  The Mark I was the first computer financed by IBM and was about 50 feet long and 8 feet tall.  It used mechanical switches to open and close its electric circuits.  It contained over 500 miles of wire and 750,000 parts.
The First All Electronic Computer
The first all electronic computer was the ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer).  ENIAC was a general purpose digital computer built in 1946 by J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly.  The ENIAC contained over 18,000 vacuum tubes (used instead of the mechanical switches of the Mark I) and was 1000 times faster than the Mark I.  In twenty seconds, ENIAC could do a math problem that would have taken 40 hours for one person to finish.  The ENIAC was built the time of World War II had as its first job to calculate the feasibility of a design for the hydrogen bomb.  The ENIAC was 100 feet long and 10 feet tall.
M ore Modern Computers
more modern type computer began with John von Neumann's development of software written in binary code.  It was von Neumann who began the practice of storing data and instructions in binary code and initiated the use of memory to store data, as well as programs.  A computer called the EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Computer) was built using binary code in 1950.  Before the EDVAC, computers like the ENIAC could do only one task then they had to be rewired to perform a different task or program.  The EDVAC's concept of storing different programs on punched cards instead of rewiring computers led to the computers that we know today.
While the modern computer is far better and faster than the EDVAC of its time, computers of today would not have been possible with the knowledge and work of many great inventors and pioneers.

Jason Derulo - Whatcha Say (Video)

COMPUTER HISTORY

Computer History
Year/Enter
Computer History
Inventors/Inventions
Computer History
Description of Event

1936
Konrad Zuse - Z1 ComputerFirst freely programmable computer.

1942
John Atanasoff & Clifford Berry
ABC Computer
Who was first in the computing biz is not always as easy as ABC.

1944
Howard Aiken & Grace Hopper
Harvard Mark I Computer
The Harvard Mark 1 computer.

1946
John Presper Eckert & John W. Mauchly
ENIAC 1 Computer
20,000 vacuum tubes later...

1948
Frederic Williams & Tom Kilburn
Manchester Baby Computer & The Williams Tube
Baby and the Williams Tube turn on the memories.

1947/48
John Bardeen, Walter Brattain & Wiliam Shockley
The Transistor
No, a transistor is not a computer, but this invention greatly affected the history of computers.

1951
John Presper Eckert & John W. Mauchly
UNIVAC Computer
First commercial computer & able to pick presidential winners.

1953
International Business Machines
IBM 701 EDPM Computer
IBM enters into 'The History of Computers'.

1954
John Backus & IBM 
FORTRAN Computer Programming Language
The first successful high level programming language.
Stanford Research Institute, Bank of America, and General Electric
ERMA and MICR
The first bank industry computer - also MICR (magnetic ink character recognition) for reading checks.

1958
Jack Kilby & Robert Noyce
The Integrated Circuit
Otherwise known as 'The Chip'

1962
Steve Russell & MIT
Spacewar Computer Game
The first computer game invented.

1964
Douglas Engelbart
Computer Mouse & Windows
Nicknamed the mouse because the tail came out the end.

1969
ARPAnetThe original Internet.

1970
Intel 1103 Computer MemoryThe world's first available dynamic RAM chip.

1971
Faggin, Hoff & Mazor
Intel 4004 Computer Microprocessor
The first microprocessor.

1971
Alan Shugart &IBM
The "Floppy" Disk
Nicknamed the "Floppy" for its flexibility.

1973
Robert Metcalfe & Xerox
The Ethernet Computer Networking
Networking.

1974/75
Scelbi & Mark-8 Altair & IBM 5100 ComputersThe first consumer computers.

1976/77
Apple I, II & TRS-80 & Commodore Pet ComputersMore first consumer computers.

1978
Dan Bricklin & Bob Frankston
VisiCalc Spreadsheet Software
Any product that pays for itself in two weeks is a surefire winner.

1979
Seymour Rubenstein & Rob Barnaby
WordStar Software
Word Processors.

1981
IBM
The IBM PC - Home Computer
From an "Acorn" grows a personal computer revolution

1981
Microsoft
MS-DOS Computer Operating System
From "Quick And Dirty" comes the operating system of the century.

1983
Apple Lisa ComputerThe first home computer with a GUI, graphical user interface.

1984
Apple Macintosh ComputerThe more affordable home computer with a GUI.

1985
Microsoft WindowsMicrosoft begins the friendly war with Apple.

Linggo, Hulyo 24, 2011

sunday

Saya kahapon sa luacan nag laro kami sa kabilang sapa sa may san ramon

Sabado, Hulyo 23, 2011

First Preliminary Exam


On one whole sheet of pad paper, answer the following questions in not less than 5 sentences.

1. Environmental scanning is a thorough observation of a target area. What are the advantages of environmental scanning over plain observation?

2. Why is earning a profit while answering the needs of the people an important part of entrepreneurship?

3. Business employs different tactics or gimmicks to attract customers. Is this practice really necessary to succeed in business? Prove your answer by citing an example.

4. How can technology help an entrepreneur become competitive on the market?

5. 
SWOT stands for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. If you were to add another area that an entrepreneur must look at, what would it be and why?

Martes, Hulyo 19, 2011

MABABA LNG CGURO AKO SA RESEARCH KASI WALA MAN AKONG RINEVIEW DOON SA EXAM baba baba baba baba baba baba baba baba ko

Lunes, Hulyo 18, 2011

HARRY POTTER THE BOY WHO LIVE AND COME TO DIE
naconfiscate ni ma'am wela ung bola ni pat dahil sakin hahaha.

pero di ko cnasadya