In 1801, Joseph Marie Jacquard made an
improvement to the textile loom by introducing a series of punched
paper cards as a template which allowed his loom to weave intricate
patterns automatically. The resulting Jacquard loom was an important
step in the development of computers because the use of punched cards to
define woven patterns can be viewed as an early, albeit limited, form
of programmability.
It was the fusion of automatic calculation with programmability that
produced the first recognizable computers. In 1837, Charles Babbage was the first to conceptualize and design a
fully programmable mechanical computer, his analytical engine.[20]
Limited finances and Babbage's inability to resist tinkering with the
design meant that the device was never completed ; nevertheless his son,
Henry Babbage, completed a simplified version of the analytical
engine's computing unit (the mill) in 1888. He gave a successful
demonstration of its use in computing tables in 1906. This machine was
given to the Science museum in South Kensington
in 1910.
In the late 1880s, Herman Hollerith invented the recording of data on a
machine-readable medium. Earlier uses of machine-readable media had been
for control, not data. "After some initial trials with paper
tape, he settled on punched cards ..."[21]
To process these punched cards he invented the tabulator, and the keypunch
machines. These three inventions were the foundation of the modern
information processing industry. Large-scale automated data processing
of punched cards was performed for the 1890 United States Census by
Hollerith's company, which later became the core of IBM. By the end
of the 19th century a number of ideas and technologies, that would later
prove useful in the realization of practical computers, had begun to
appear: Boolean algebra, the vacuum
tube (thermionic valve), punched cards and tape, and the teleprinter.
During the first half of the 20th century, many scientific computing
needs were met by increasingly sophisticated analog computers, which used a direct mechanical or electrical
model of the problem as a basis for computation.
However, these were not programmable and generally lacked the
versatility and accuracy of modern digital computers.
Alan Turing is widely regarded as the father of modern computer science. In 1936 Turing provided an influential
formalisation of the concept of the algorithm
and computation with the Turing machine, providing a blueprint for the electronic
digital computer.[22]
Of his role in the creation of the modern computer, Time magazine in naming Turing one of the 100 most
influential people of the 20th century, states: "The fact remains
that everyone who taps at a keyboard, opening a spreadsheet or a
word-processing program, is working on an incarnation of a Turing
machine".[22]
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