The history of the modern computer begins with two separate
technologies, automated calculation and programmability, but no single
device can be identified as the earliest computer, partly because of the
inconsistent application of that term. A few devices are worth
mentioning though, like some mechanical aids to computing, which were
very successful and survived for centuries until the advent of the electronic calculator,
like the Sumerian
abacus,
designed around 2500 BC[4]
of which a descendant won a speed competition against a modern desk
calculating machine in Japan in 1946,[5]
the slide rules, invented in the 1620s, which were carried on five
Apollo space missions, including to the
moon[6]
and arguably the astrolabe and the Antikythera mechanism, an ancient
astronomical computer built by the Greeks around 80 BC.[7]
The Greek mathematician Hero of Alexandria (c. 10–70 AD) built a mechanical
theater which performed a play lasting 10 minutes and was operated by a
complex system of ropes and drums that might be considered to be a means
of deciding which parts of the mechanism performed which actions and
when.[8]
This is the essence of programmability.
Around the end of the 10th century, the French monk Gerbert d'Aurillac brought back from Spain the
drawings of a machine invented by the Moors that
answered either Yes or No to the questions it was asked.[9]
Again in the 13th century, the monks Albertus Magnus and Roger
Bacon built talking androids without any further development (Albertus Magnus
complained that he had wasted forty years of his life when Thomas Aquinas, terrified by his machine, destroyed it).[10]
In 1642, the Renaissance saw the invention of the mechanical calculator,[11]
a device that could perform all four arithmetic operations without
relying on human intelligence.[12]
The mechanical calculator was at the root of the development of
computers in two separate ways. Initially, it was in trying to develop
more powerful and more flexible calculators[13]
that the computer was first theorized by Charles Babbage[14][15]
and then developed.[16]
Secondly, development of a low-cost electronic calculator,
successor to the mechanical calculator, resulted in the development by Intel[17]
of the first commercially available microprocessor integrated circuit
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