History
of computing:
The history of computing is
longer than the history of computing hardware and modern computing
technology and includes the history of methods intended for
pen and paper or for chalk and slate, with or without the
aid of tables. The timeline of computing presents a summary
list of major developments in computing by date.
The earliest computing hardware
was probably some form of tally stick; later record keeping
aids include Phoenician clay shapes which represented counts
of items, probably livestock or grains, in containers. Something
similar is found in early Minoan excavations.
Devices to aid computation have
changed from simple recording and counting devices to the
abacus, the slide rule, analog computers, and more recent
electronic computers. Even today, an experienced abacus user
using a device hundreds of years old can sometimes complete
basic calculations more quickly than an unskilled person using
an electronic calculator — though for more complex calculations,
computers out-perform even the most skilled human.
It is difficult to define any
one device as the earliest computer. The very definition of
a computer has changed and it is therefore impossible to identify
the first computer. Many devices once called "computers"
would no longer qualify as such by today's standards.
Originally, the term "computer"
referred to a person who performed numerical calculations
(a human computer), often with the aid of a mechanical calculating
device. Examples of early mechanical computing devices included
the abacus, the slide rule and arguably the astrolabe and
the Antikythera mechanism (which dates from about 150-100
BC). |